CRMay 8

From Conceptual Scaffold to Prototype: A Standardized Zonal Architecture for Wi-Fi Security Training

arXiv:2605.0740014.4Has Code
Predicted impact top 83% in CR · last 90 daysOriginality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

For cybersecurity trainers and researchers, this provides a structured foundation for building Wi-Fi-focused cyber ranges, though it remains a conceptual proposal with only a partial prototype.

The paper addresses the lack of dedicated cyber range environments for Wi-Fi-specific security training by proposing a conceptual architecture and an open-source prototype. The architecture is organized into modular zones to support scalability and extensibility, with a prototype implementing scenario generation and instantiation.

Wi-Fi is the dominant wireless access technology, but its widespread use also exposes systems to threats such as rogue access points, deauthentication attacks, and other IEEE 802.11-specific vulnerabilities. Although Cyber Ranges (CRs) have become valuable platforms for cybersecurity training and experimentation, existing wireless-oriented solutions mainly target heterogeneous IoT or mobile-network settings, with Wi-Fi typically treated as one among many. As a result, dedicated CR environments for Wi-Fi-specific security experimentation remain limited. This gap is particularly relevant because wireless attacks often require protocol-aware experimentation that is difficult to reproduce in conventional training environments. This paper introduces a conceptual architecture for a Wi-Fi-focused CR tailored to IEEE 802.11 security scenarios and an open-source prototype. The proposed design is grounded in established CR design principles and organized around core infrastructure, learning management and support, monitoring, management, and access-control zones. Structuring the platform into these distinct zones, the architecture supports modularity, scalability, and future extensibility. Part of the design is realized in a prototype publicly available in a GitHub repository that implements the scenario generation, storage, retrieval, and instantiation workflow, offering an initial practical foundation for the proposed architecture. Overall, the paper provides a structured foundation for the future implementation of Wi-Fi-specialized CR platforms for targeted experimentation.

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