Publication | Closed Access
Evaluating sinkhole defense techniques in RPL networks
113
Citations
19
References
2012
Year
Unknown Venue
EngineeringInformation SecurityNetwork AnalysisSensor ConnectivitySinkhole Defense TechniquesHardware SecurityWireless SecuritySinkhole ProblemInternet Of ThingsSinkhole Captures TrafficSecure ProtocolNetwork SecurityComputer ScienceSinkhole AttacksData SecurityCryptographySurvivable NetworkSecure RoutingControl System Security
In this work, we present the results of a study on the detrimental effects of sinkhole attacks on Wireless Sensor Networks (WSNs) which employ the Routing Protocol for LLNs (Low-power and Lossy Networks). A sinkhole is a compromised node which attempts to capture traffic with the intent to drop messages, thus degrading the end-to-end delivery performance, that is, reducing the number of messages successfully delivered to their destination. The mechanism by which the sinkhole captures traffic is by advertising an attractive route to its neighbors. We evaluate two countermeasures addressing the sinkhole problem: a parent fail-over and a rank authentication technique. We show via simulation that while each technique, applied alone, does not work all that well, the combination of the two techniques significantly improves the performance of a network under attack. We also demonstrate that, with the defenses described, increasing the density of the network can combat a penetration of sinkholes nodes, without needing to identify the sinkholes.
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