학술논문

A Statistical Approach to Anomaly Detection in Interdomain Routing
Document Type
Conference
Source
2006 3rd International Conference on Broadband Communications, Networks and Systems Broadband Communications, Networks and Systems, 2006. BROADNETS 2006. 3rd International Conference on. :1-10 Oct, 2006
Subject
Communication, Networking and Broadcast Technologies
Computing and Processing
Routing
Internet
Event detection
Hurricanes
Earthquakes
Large-scale systems
Protocols
Fluctuations
Pattern recognition
Data mining
Language
Abstract
A number of events such as hurricanes, earthquakes, power outages can cause large-scale failures in the Internet. These in turn cause anomalies in the interdomain routing process. The policy-based nature of Border Gateway protocol (BGP) further aggravates the effect of these anomalies causing severe, long lasting route fluctuations. In this work we propose an architecture for anomaly detection that can be implemented on individual routers. We use statistical pattern recognition techniques for extracting meaningful features from the BGP update message data. A time-series segmentation algorithm is then carried out on the feature traces to detect the onset of an instability event. The performance of the proposed algorithm is evaluated using real Internet trace data. We show that instabilities triggered by events like router mis-configurations, infrastructure failures and worm attacks can be detected with a false alarm rate as low as 0.0083 alarms per hour. We also show that our learning based mechanism is highly robust as compared to methods like Exponentially Weighted Moving Average (EWMA) based detection.