Visible to the public Securing Ultra-High-Bandwidth Science DMZ Networks with Coordinated Situational Awareness

TitleSecuring Ultra-High-Bandwidth Science DMZ Networks with Coordinated Situational Awareness
Publication TypeConference Paper
Year of Publication2017
AuthorsNagendra, Vasudevan, Yegneswaran, Vinod, Porras, Phillip
Conference NameProceedings of the 16th ACM Workshop on Hot Topics in Networks
PublisherACM
Conference LocationNew York, NY, USA
ISBN Number978-1-4503-5569-8
Keywordsdeep packet inspection, pubcrawl, resilience, Resiliency, Scalability
Abstract

The Science DMZ (SDMZ) is a special purpose network infrastructure that is engineered to cater to the ultra-high bandwidth needs of the scientific and high performance computing (HPC) communities. These networks are isolated from stateful security devices such as firewalls and deep packet inspection (DPI) engines to allow HPC data transfer nodes (DTNs) to efficiently transfer petabytes of data without associated bandwidth and performance bottlenecks. This paper presents our ongoing effort toward the development of more fine-grained data flow access control policies to manage SDMZ networks that service large-scale experiments with varying data sensitivity levels and privacy constraints. We present a novel system, called CoordiNetZ (CNZ), that provides coordinated security monitoring and policy enforcement for sites participating in SDMZ projects by using an intent-based policy framework for effectively capturing the high-level policy intents of non-admin SDMZ project users (e.g., scientists, researchers, students). Central to our solution is the notion of coordinated situational awareness that is extracted from the synthesis of context derived from SDMZ host DTN applications and the network substrate. To realize this vision, we present a specialized process-monitoring system and flow-monitoring tool that facilitate context-aware data-flow intervention and policy enforcement in ultra-highspeed data transfer environments. We evaluate our prototype implementation using case studies that highlight the utility of our framework and demonstrate how security policy could be effectively specified and implemented within and across SDMZ networks.

URLhttp://doi.acm.org/10.1145/3152434.3152460
DOI10.1145/3152434.3152460
Citation Keynagendra_securing_2017