2019
DOI: 10.3390/e21020210
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An Overview on Denial-of-Service Attacks in Control Systems: Attack Models and Security Analyses

Abstract: In this paper, we provide an overview of recent research efforts on networked control systems under denial-of-service attacks. Our goal is to discuss the utility of different attack modeling and analysis techniques proposed in the literature for addressing feedback control, state estimation, and multi-agent consensus problems in the face of jamming attacks in wireless channels and malicious packet drops in multi-hop networks. We discuss several modeling approaches that are employed for capturing the uncertaint… Show more

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Cited by 109 publications
(45 citation statements)
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“…Most of existing DoS attacks assumptions need distributed information of attacks. For example, the occurrence of attacks is assumed to follow a Markov transition probability distribution [33], or the maximum number of attacks during a separated time period [45] is assumed to be given. These assumptions are sometimes not available in practical situations, and the introduced parameters (i.e., attack statistics, transition probability and maximum number of attacks) are hard to be determined in advance.…”
Section: Problem Formulationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Most of existing DoS attacks assumptions need distributed information of attacks. For example, the occurrence of attacks is assumed to follow a Markov transition probability distribution [33], or the maximum number of attacks during a separated time period [45] is assumed to be given. These assumptions are sometimes not available in practical situations, and the introduced parameters (i.e., attack statistics, transition probability and maximum number of attacks) are hard to be determined in advance.…”
Section: Problem Formulationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While regarding these techniques, it is mandatory to mention jamming, a subset of denial of service attacks in which malicious nodes block legitimate communication by causing intentional interference in networks [53] and which is a key threat to cyber physical systems [54][55][56][57]; while jamming could be included inside an interference category for degradation or disruption operations, especially in WiFi sensor networks, we cannot consider jamming inside CNA techniques as it is related to Electronic Warfare. Anyway, interference techniques exist in CNA operations, with most well-known instances of this category relying upon features of the TCP protocol [58]; inside this category we can include packet dropping [59,60], an attack whose goal is to make the source and the destination perceive disconnection or degradation of path quality. Of course, while referring to degradation not all packets are to be dropped-as it could be easily detected, and will fall into the disruption tactic-but only a subset of the packets is dropped, thereby making it more difficult to detect [59].…”
Section: Interferencementioning
confidence: 99%
“…To account for a more practical scenario, limitations on attack frequencies and attack duration are taken into consideration. A complete survey of DoS attacks modelling in CPS has been reported in [40].…”
Section: Resilient Control Strategiesmentioning
confidence: 99%