Anxiao He (Zhejiang University), Jiandong Fu (Zhejiang University), Kai Bu (Zhejiang University), Ruiqi Zhou (Zhejiang University), Chenlu Miao (Zhejiang University), Kui Ren (Zhejiang University)

Path validation has long been explored as a fundamental solution to secure future Internet architectures. It enables end-hosts to specify forwarding paths for their traffic and to verify whether the traffic follows the specified paths. In comparison with the current Internet architecture that keeps packet forwarding uncontrolled and transparent to end-hosts, path validation benefits end-hosts with flexibility, security, and privacy. The key design enforces routers to embed their credentials into cryptographic proofs in packet headers. Such proofs require sufficiently complex computation to guarantee unforgeability. This imposes an inevitable barrier on validation efficiency for a single packet. In this paper, we propose aggregate validation to implement path validation in a group-wise way. Amortizing overhead across packets in a group, aggregate validation promises higher validation efficiency without sacrificing security. We implement aggregation validation through Symphony, with various design techniques integrated and security properties formally proved. In comparison with state-of-the-art EPIC, Symphony speeds up packet processing by 3.78 ×∼ 18.40 × and increases communication throughput by 1.13 ×∼ 6.11 ×.

View More Papers

50 Shades of Support: A Device-Centric Analysis of Android...

Abbas Acar (Florida International University), Güliz Seray Tuncay (Google), Esteban Luques (Florida International University), Harun Oz (Florida International University), Ahmet Aris (Florida International University), Selcuk Uluagac (Florida International University)

Read More

Wait, What Does a SOC Do?

Joe Nehila, Drew Walsh (Deloitte And Touche)

Read More

Untangle: Multi-Layer Web Server Fingerprinting

Cem Topcuoglu (Northeastern University), Kaan Onarlioglu (Akamai Technologies), Bahruz Jabiyev (Northeastern University), Engin Kirda (Northeastern University)

Read More

Not your Type! Detecting Storage Collision Vulnerabilities in Ethereum...

Nicola Ruaro (University of California, Santa Barbara), Fabio Gritti (University of California, Santa Barbara), Robert McLaughlin (University of California, Santa Barbara), Ilya Grishchenko (University of California, Santa Barbara), Christopher Kruegel (University of California, Santa Barbara), Giovanni Vigna (University of California, Santa Barbara)

Read More