Combinatorial design of key distribution mechanisms for wireless sensor networks


Autoria(s): Camtepe, Seyit A.; Yener, Bulent
Data(s)

12/04/2004

Resumo

Key distribution is one of the most challenging security issues in wireless sensor networks where sensor nodes are randomly scattered over a hostile territory. In such a sensor deployment scenario, there will be no prior knowledge of post deployment configuration. For security solutions requiring pair wise keys, it is impossible to decide how to distribute key pairs to sensor nodes before the deployment. Existing approaches to this problem are to assign more than one key, namely a key-chain, to each node. Key-chains are randomly drawn from a key-pool. Either two neighbouring nodes have a key in common in their key-chains, or there is a path, called key-path, among these two nodes where each pair of neighbouring nodes on this path has a key in common. Problem in such a solution is to decide on the key-chain size and key-pool size so that every pair of nodes can establish a session key directly or through a path with high probability. The size of the key-path is the key factor for the efficiency of the design. This paper presents novel, deterministic and hybrid approaches based on Combinatorial Design for key distribution. In particular, several block design techniques are considered for generating the key-chains and the key-pools. Comparison to probabilistic schemes shows that our combinatorial approach produces better connectivity with smaller key-chain sizes.

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/58481/

Publicador

Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute

Relação

http://cgi5.cs.rpi.edu/research/pdf/04-10.pdf

Camtepe, Seyit A. & Yener, Bulent (2004) Combinatorial design of key distribution mechanisms for wireless sensor networks. Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, New York.

Fonte

School of Electrical Engineering & Computer Science; Information Security Institute; Science & Engineering Faculty

Palavras-Chave #080303 Computer System Security #key management #wireless sensor networks #combinatorial design
Tipo

Report