Biblio
{The secure exact-repair regenerating codes are studied, for distributed storage systems with parameters (n
Distributed storage systems and caching systems are becoming widespread, and this motivates the increasing interest on assessing their achievable performance in terms of reliability for legitimate users and security against malicious users. While the assessment of reliability takes benefit of the availability of well established metrics and tools, assessing security is more challenging. The classical cryptographic approach aims at estimating the computational effort for an attacker to break the system, and ensuring that it is far above any feasible amount. This has the limitation of depending on attack algorithms and advances in computing power. The information-theoretic approach instead exploits capacity measures to achieve unconditional security against attackers, but often does not provide practical recipes to reach such a condition. We propose a mixed cryptographic/information-theoretic approach with a twofold goal: estimating the levels of information-theoretic security and defining a practical scheme able to achieve them. In order to find optimal choices of the parameters of the proposed scheme, we exploit an effective probabilistic model checker, which allows us to overcome several limitations of more conventional methods.
In this paper, we present a decentralized nonlinear robust controller to enhance the transient stability margin of synchronous generators. Although, the trend in power system control is shifting towards centralized or distributed controller approaches, the remote data dependency of these schemes fuels cyber-physical security issues. Since the excessive delay or losing remote data affect severely the operation of those controllers, the designed controller emerges as an alternative for stabilization of Smart Grids in case of unavailability of remote data and in the presence of plant parametric uncertainties. The proposed controller actuates distributed storage systems such as flywheels in order to reduce stabilization time and it implements a novel input time delay compensation technique. Lyapunov stability analysis proves that all the tracking error signals are globally uniformly ultimately bounded. Furthermore, the simulation results demonstrate that the proposed controller outperforms traditional local power systems controllers such as Power System Stabilizers.