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Appendix D - Validation of direction-conforming rule

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 September 2012

Antonio Nucci
Affiliation:
Narus Inc., Mountain View, California
Konstantina Papagiannaki
Affiliation:
Intel, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
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Summary

Due to the challenges of obtaining an AS topology annotated with AS relationships, it is infeasible to use the valley-free rule to identify redistribution path spoofing in the work. Alternatively, we apply the direction-conforming rule to the AS topology annotated with directed AS-links to carry out the detection. The following theorems show that the direction-conforming rule actually shows roughly equivalent efficiency.

Theorem D.1

For an observer AS, a valley-free path in the AS topology annotated with AS relationships must be “direction-conforming” in the corresponding AS topology annotated with inferred directed AS-links.

Theorem D.2

  1. (1) For a Tier-1 AS, the direction-conforming paths in the AS topology annotated with inferred directed AS-links must be valley-free in the real AS topology annotated with AS relationships.

  2. (2) For a non-Tier-1 AS, except the redistribution path-spoofing paths launched by the provider ASs, the direction-conforming paths must be valley-free.

In order to prove these theorems, we first investigate the mapping between the real AS topology annotated with AS relationships and the inferred AS topology annotated with directed AS-links.

Note that, similar to the analysis in the text, we assume that the inferred topology is “ideally” complete, namely it contains all legitimate directed AS-links that the observer AS should see. In order to infer a complete AS topology comprising of directed AS-links based on the route announcements from the observer AS, we assume an ideal inference scenario, in which the AS connections and relationships do not change over the inference period and every AS tries all possible valid routes.

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Design, Measurement and Management of Large-Scale IP Networks
Bridging the Gap Between Theory and Practice
, pp. 379 - 381
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2008

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