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Article type: Research Article
Authors: Migault, Daniela | Guggemos, Tobiasb; * | Killian, Sylvainc | Laurent, Marylined | Pujolle, Guyc | Wary, Jean Philippee
Affiliations: [a] Ericsson Security Research, Montréal, Canada | [b] MNM-Team, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität, München, Germany | [c] Université Pierre et Marie Curie (UPMC), Paris, France | [d] SAMOVAR, Télécom SudParis, CNRS, Université Paris-Saclay, EVRY, France | [e] Orange Labs, Issy-les-Moulineaux, France
Correspondence: [*] Corresponding author. E-mail: [email protected].
Abstract: The number of devices connected through the Internet of Things (IoT) will significantly grow in the next few years while security of their interconnections is going to be a major challenge. For many devices in IoT scenarios, the necessary resources to send and receive bytes are extremely high and when such devices are powered with battery the amount of exchanged bytes directly impacts their life time. As a result, compression of existing protocols is a widely accepted technique to make IoT benefit from the protocols developed over the last decades. This paper presents ESP Header Compression (EHC), a framework that enables compression of packets protected with Encapsulating Security Payload (ESP). EHC is composed of EHC Rules, targeting the compression of a specific field and organized according to EHC Strategies. Further, the paper presents Diet-ESP, an EHC Strategy that highly reduces the networking overhead of ESP packets to address the IoT security and bandwidth requirements. Diet-ESP results in sending fewer bytes which in turn reduces the number of required radio frames and thus battery consumption. The measurements showed that sending 10 byte application data on IEEE 802.15.4 radio networks secured with the standard ESP requires sending an additional frame. This results into a 95% energy overhead compared to the unprotected data, while Diet-ESP results only in a 3% overhead compared to unprotected data. This small overhead is achievable with some compressions being performed within the ESP stack which requires altering the same. Nevertheless, Diet-ESP remains fully security compliant to ESP and performs better than any other compression framework as far as ESP is considered.
Keywords: IoT, security, IPsec, ESP, EHC, Diet-ESP, compression, performances
DOI: 10.3233/JCS-16857
Journal: Journal of Computer Security, vol. 25, no. 2, pp. 173-203, 2017
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