CRJul 16, 2020

Vulnerability-Aware Resilient Networks: Software Diversity-based Network Adaptation

arXiv:2007.08469v1
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses network security for systems using diverse software, though it appears incremental as it builds on existing software diversity concepts.

The paper tackled the problem of minimizing security vulnerability in networks while maintaining connectivity by proposing a software diversity-based adaptation (SDA) scheme, which outperformed baseline schemes in experiments across three real network topologies with varying densities.

By leveraging the principle of software polyculture to ensure security in a network, we proposed a vulnerability-based software diversity metric to determine how a network topology can be adapted to minimize security vulnerability while maintaining maximum network connectivity. Our proposed software diversity-based adaptation (SDA) scheme estimates a node's software diversity based on the vulnerabilities of software packages installed on other nodes on attack paths reachable to the node and employs it for edge adaptations, such as removing an edge with a neighboring node that exposes high security vulnerability because two connected nodes use the same software packages or a neighboring node may have high software vulnerability or adding an edge with another node with less or no security vulnerability because the two nodes use different software packages or have low vulnerabilities associated with them. To validate the proposed SDA scheme, we conducted extensive experiments comparing the proposed SDA scheme with counterpart baseline schemes in real networks. Our simulation experimental results proved the outperformance of our proposed SDA compared to the existing counterparts and provided insightful findings in terms of the effectiveness and efficiency of the proposed SDA scheme under three real network topologies with vastly different network density.

Foundations

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