Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) Attacks Detection Mechanism
Saravanan Kumarasamy, R. Asokan

TL;DR
This paper proposes a hybrid DDoS defense mechanism combining pushback and client puzzles, implemented at core routers to detect and mitigate attack traffic while allowing legitimate users access.
Contribution
It introduces a novel router-based pushback scheme that integrates puzzle solving at core routers, enhancing DDoS attack detection and mitigation capabilities.
Findings
Hybrid scheme effectively detects malicious hosts.
Core router puzzle mechanism reduces attack traffic.
Improves legitimate traffic throughput.
Abstract
Pushback is a mechanism for defending against Distributed Denial-of-Service (DDoS) attacks. DDoS attacks are treated as a congestion-control problem, but because most such congestion is caused by malicious hosts not obeying traditional end-to-end congestion control, the problem must be handled by the routers. Functionality is added to each router to detect and preferentially drop packets that probably belong to an attack. Upstream routers are also notified to drop such packets in order that the router's resources be used to route legitimate traffic hence term pushback. Client puzzles have been advocated as a promising countermeasure to DoS attacks in the recent years. In order to identify the attackers, the victim server issues a puzzle to the client that sent the traffic. When the client is able to solve the puzzle, it is assumed to be authentic and the traffic from it is allowed into…
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