Publisher DOI: 10.1016/j.comnet.2024.110855
Title: Network anomaly detection in cars : a case for time-sensitive stream filtering and policing
Language: English
Authors: Meyer, Philipp  
Häckel, Timo  
Reider, Sandra 
Korf, Franz 
Schmidt, Thomas C.  
Keywords: Automotive security; In-vehicular networks; Network simulation; QoS; Time-sensitive networking; TSN
Issue Date: 21-Oct-2024
Publisher: Elsevier
Journal or Series Name: Computer networks : the international journal of computer and telecommunications networking 
Volume: 255
Abstract: 
Connected vehicles are threatened by cyber-attacks as in-vehicle networks technologically approach (mobile) LANs with several wireless interconnects to the outside world. Malware that infiltrates a car today faces potential victims of constrained, barely shielded Electronic Control Units (ECUs). Many ECUs perform critical driving functions, which stresses the need for hardening security and resilience of in-vehicle networks in a multifaceted way. Future vehicles will comprise Ethernet backbones that differentiate services via Time-Sensitive Networking (TSN). The well-known vehicular control flows will follow predefined schedules and TSN traffic classifications. In this paper, we exploit this traffic classification to build a network anomaly detection system. We show how filters and policies of TSN can identify misbehaving traffic and thereby serve as distributed guards on the data link layer. On this lowest possible layer, our approach derives a highly efficient network protection directly from TSN. We classify link layer anomalies and micro-benchmark the detection accuracy in each class. Based on a topology derived from a real-world car and its traffic definitions we evaluate the detection system in realistic macro-benchmarks based on recorded attack traces. Our results show that the detection accuracy depends on how exact the specifications of in-vehicle communication are configured. Most notably for a fully specified communication matrix, our anomaly detection remains free of false-positive alarms, which is a significant benefit for implementing automated countermeasures in future vehicles.
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12738/18095
ISSN: 1872-7069
Review status: This version was peer reviewed (peer review)
Institute: Department Informatik 
Fakultät Technik und Informatik 
Type: Article
Additional note: article number: 110855
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