Illuminating Router Vendor Diversity Within Providers and Along Network Paths

Conference Paper (2023)
Author(s)

Taha Albakour (Technical University of Berlin)

Oliver Gasser (Max Planck Institute)

Robert Beverly (Center for Measurement and Analysis of Network Data)

G. Smaragdakis (TU Delft - Cyber Security)

Research Group
Cyber Security
Copyright
© 2023 Taha Albakour, Oliver Gasser, Robert Beverly, G. Smaragdakis
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1145/3618257.3624813
More Info
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Publication Year
2023
Language
English
Copyright
© 2023 Taha Albakour, Oliver Gasser, Robert Beverly, G. Smaragdakis
Research Group
Cyber Security
Pages (from-to)
89-103
Reuse Rights

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Abstract



The Internet architecture has facilitated a multi-party, distributed, and heterogeneous physical infrastructure where routers from different vendors connect and inter-operate via IP. Such vendor heterogeneity can have important security and policy implications. For example, a security vulnerability may be specific to a particular vendor and implementation, and thus will have a disproportionate impact on particular networks and paths if exploited. From a policy perspective, governments are now explicitly banning particular vendors-or have threatened to do so.

Despite these critical issues, the composition of router vendors across the Internet remains largely opaque. Remotely identifying router vendors is challenging due to their strict security posture, indistinguishability due to code sharing across vendors, and noise due to vendor mergers. We make progress in overcoming these challenges by developing LFP, a tool that improves the coverage, accuracy, and efficiency of router fingerprinting as compared to the current state-of-the-art. We leverage LFP to characterize the degree of router vendor homogeneity within networks and the regional distribution of vendors. We then take a path-centric view and apply LFP to better understand the potential for correlated failures and fate-sharing. Finally, we perform a case study on inter and intra-United States data paths to explore the feasibility to make vendor-based routing policy decisions, i.e., whether it is possible to avoid a particular vendor given the current infrastructure.