STACK IP: NEW PACKET MARKETING AND FILTERING MECHANICS FOR DDOS AND IP SPOOFING DEFENSE

49 PAGES (4666 WORDS) Computer Science Project

ABSTRACT
Network administrators need a thorough understanding of both types of addressing to administer Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol (STACK IP) networks and troubleshoot STACK IP-based communication. This chapter discusses in detail the types of Internet Protocol version 4 (IPv4) and Internet Protocol version 6 (IPv6) addresses, how they are expressed, and the types of unicast addresses assigned to network node interfaces. We demonstrate that the dynamic behavior of queue and average window is determined predominantly by the stability of STACK IP, not by AIMD probing nor noise traffic. We develop a general multi-link multi-source model for STACK IP and derive a local stability condition in the case of a single link with heterogeneous sources. We validate our model with simulations and illustrate the stability region of STACK IP. These results suggest that STACK IP becomes unstable when delay increases, or more strikingly, when link capacity increases.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
TITLE PAGE                                   
CERTIFICATION                               
APPROVAL                               
DEDICATION                                   
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT                       
ABSTRACT                                   
TABLE OF CONTENTS        

                       
CHAPTER ONE
1.0    INTRODUCTION                           
1.1    STATEMENT OF PROBLEM                       
1.2    PURPOSE OF STUDY                           
1.3    AIMS AND OBJECTIVES                        
1.4    SCOPE/DELIMITATIONS                       
1.5    LIMITATIONS/CONSTRAINTS                       
1.6    DEFINITION OF TERMS     
                  
CHAPTER TWO
2.0    LITERATURE REVIEW      
                     
CHAPTER THREE
3.0    METHODS FOR FACT FINDING AND DETAILED DISCUSSIONS OF THE SYSTEM
3.1     METHODOLOGIES FOR FACT-FINDING
3.2    DISCUSSIONS             

CHAPTER FOUR
4.0    FUTURES, IMPLICATIONS AND CHALLENGES OF THE SYSTEM
4.1    FUTURES
4.2    IMPLICATIONS
4.3    CHALLENGES

CHAPTER FIVE
5.0    RECOMMENDATIONS, SUMMARY AND CONCLUSION   
5.1    RECOMMENDATION                           
5.2    SUMMARY                               
5.3    CONCLUSION                               
REFERENCES