International Journal of Engineering and Management Research (IJEMR)
  • Year: 2015
  • Volume: 5
  • Issue: 6

Performance Evaluation in Vampire Attack Detection from Wireless Ad-Hoc Sensor Networks

  • Author:
  • A Menaka
  • Total Page Count: 6
  • Page Number: 126 to 131

Research Scholar, Don Bosco College, Dharmapuri, Tamil Nadu, India

Online published on 21 November, 2017.

Abstract

Ad-hoc low-power wireless networks are an exciting research direction in sensing and pervasive computing. Prior security work in this area has focused primarily on denial of communication at the routing or medium access control levels. This paper explores resource depletion attacks at the routing protocol layer, which permanently disable networks by quickly draining nodes’ battery power. These “Vampire” attacks are not specific to any specific protocol, but rather rely on the properties of many popular classes of routing protocols. We find that all examined protocols are susceptible to Vampire attacks, which are devastating, difficult to detect, and are easy to carry out using as few as one malicious insider sending only protocol compliant messages. In the worst case, a single Vampire can increase network-wide energy usage by a factor of O(N), where N in the number of network nodes.

Keywords

Ad-Hoc network Routing Protocols, Denial of service, Medium Access Protocols, Vampire attack, Wireless Networks, etc