Sangam: A Confluence of Knowledge Streams

Visual Correlation of Network Traffic and Host Processes for Computer Security

Show simple item record

dc.contributor Computer Science
dc.contributor North, Christopher L.
dc.contributor Midkiff, Scott F.
dc.contributor Arthur, James D.
dc.contributor Tatar, Deborah Gail
dc.contributor Marchany, Randolph C.
dc.creator Fink, Glenn Allen
dc.date 2014-03-14T20:15:35Z
dc.date 2014-03-14T20:15:35Z
dc.date 2006-08-15
dc.date 2006-08-23
dc.date 2007-10-05
dc.date 2006-10-05
dc.date.accessioned 2023-03-01T08:10:31Z
dc.date.available 2023-03-01T08:10:31Z
dc.identifier etd-08232006-203521
dc.identifier http://hdl.handle.net/10919/28770
dc.identifier http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-08232006-203521/
dc.identifier.uri http://localhost:8080/xmlui/handle/CUHPOERS/276630
dc.description Much computer communications activity is invisible to the user, happening without explicit permission. When system administrators investigate network communications activities, they have difficulty tracing them back to the processes that cause them. The strictly layered TCP/IP networking model that underlies all widely used, general-purpose operating systems makes it impossible to trace a packet seen on the network back to the processes that are responsible for generating and receiving it. The TCP/IP model separates the concerns of network routing and process ownership so that the layers cannot share the information needed to correlate packets to processes. But knowing what processes are responsible for communications activities can be a great help in determining whether that activity is benign or malicious. My solution combines a visualization tool, a kernel-level correlation engine, and middleware that ties the two together. My research enables security personnel to visually correlate packets to the processes they belong to helping users determine whether communications are benign or malicious. I present my discoveries about the system administrator community and relate how I created a new correlation technology. I conducted a series of initial interviews with system administrators to clarify the problem, researched available solutions in the literature, identified what was missing, and worked with users to build it. The users were my co-designers as I built a series of prototypes of increasing fidelity and conducted usability evaluations on them. I hope that my work will demonstrate how well the participatory design approach works. My work has implications for the kernel structure of all operating system kernels with a TCP/IP protocol stack and network model. In light of my research, I hope security personnel will more clearly see sets of communicating processes on a network as basic computational units rather than the individual host computers. If kernel designers incorporate my findings into their work, it will enable much better security monitoring than is possible today making the Internet safer for all.
dc.description Ph. D.
dc.format application/pdf
dc.publisher Virginia Tech
dc.relation Final.pdf
dc.rights In Copyright
dc.rights http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/
dc.subject Insight-Based Method
dc.subject Computer Security
dc.subject Software Architecture
dc.subject Software Design
dc.subject Information Visualization
dc.subject Human-Computer Interaction
dc.title Visual Correlation of Network Traffic and Host Processes for Computer Security
dc.type Dissertation


Files in this item

Files Size Format View
Final.pdf 15.16Mb application/pdf View/Open

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Show simple item record

Search DSpace


Advanced Search

Browse