NICRApr 5, 2017

CHAOS: an SDN-based Moving Target Defense System

arXiv:1704.01482v127 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses network security challenges for cyber systems by providing a more targeted and efficient MTD approach, though it appears incremental as it builds on existing MTD and SDN concepts.

The paper tackles the problem of indiscriminate network obfuscation in Moving Target Defense (MTD) systems, which can disrupt key services and reduce performance, by proposing CHAOS, an SDN-based MTD system that discriminately obfuscates hosts with different security levels, resulting in effectively decreasing the percentage of information disclosure to guarantee normal traffic flow.

The static nature of current cyber systems has made them easy to be attacked and compromised. By constantly changing a system, Moving Target Defense (MTD) has provided a promising way to reduce or move the attack surface that is available for exploitation by an adversary. However, the current network- based MTD obfuscates networks indiscriminately that makes some networks key services, such as web and DNS services, unavailable, because many information of these services has to be opened to the outside and remain real without compromising their usability. Moreover, the indiscriminate obfuscation also severely reduces the performance of networks. In this paper, we propose CHAOS, an SDN (Software-defined networking)-based MTD system, which discriminately obfuscates hosts with different security levels in a network. In CHAOS, we introduce a Chaos Tower Obfuscation (CTO) method, which uses a Chaos Tower Structure (CTS) to depict the hierarchy of all the hosts in an intranet and provides a more unpredictable and flexible obfuscation method. We also present the design of CHAOS, which leverages SDN features to obfuscate the attack surface including IP obfuscation, ports obfuscation, and fingerprint obfuscation thereby enhancing the unpredictability of the networking environment. We develop fast CTO algorithms to achieve a different degree of obfuscation for the hosts in each layer. Our experimental results show that a network protected by CHAOS is capable of decreasing the percentage of information disclosure effectively to guarantee the normal flow of traffic.

Foundations

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