Yasir Ali Farrukh

and 5 more

Adapting modern approaches for network intrusion detection is becoming critical, given the rapid technological advancement and adversarial attack rates. Therefore, packet-based methods utilizing payload data are gaining much popularity due to their effectiveness in detecting certain attacks. However, packet-based approaches suffer from a lack of standardization, resulting in incomparability and reproducibility issues. Unlike flow-based datasets, no standard labeled dataset exists, forcing researchers to follow bespoke labeling pipelines for individual approaches. Without a standardized baseline, proposed approaches cannot be compared and evaluated with each other. One cannot gauge whether the proposed approach is a methodological advancement or is just being benefited from the proprietary interpretation of the dataset. Addressing comparability and reproducibility issues, we introduce Payload-Byte, an open-source tool for extracting and labeling network packets in this work. Payload-Byte utilizes metadata information and labels raw traffic captures of modern intrusion detection datasets in a generalized manner. Moreover, we transformed the labeled data into a byte-wise feature vector that can be utilized for training machine learning models. The whole cycle of processing and labeling is explicitly stated in this work. Furthermore, source code and processed data are made publicly available so that it may act as a standardized baseline for future research work. Lastly, we present a brief comparative analysis of machine learning models trained on packet-based and flow-based data. UNSW-NB15 and CIC-IDS2017.

Irfan Khan

and 5 more

Microgrids specialized for tactical operations  have been subjected to several challenges. These tactical power  networks are islanded and have a relatively low power  generation capacity. Meeting power requirements of military  equipment, having intermittent and highly inductive nature,  exposes microgrids to severe stresses. Existing methodologies to  monitor and control the impact of load variations require  sophisticated equipment and trained personnel. The objective of  this research paper is to present an open-source edge energy  monitoring system (EEMS) for efficient demand management of  tactical networks. The proposed system is capable of capturing all minute operational artifacts, including harmonic distortions  and power quality of these networks. A variable gain amplifier  circuit enables the proposed EMS to sense all the signals in a  wide range of power with higher resolution. The proposed  system utilizes raspberry pi as an edge device to meet the low  power requirements of tactical networks. The novel concurrent  programming approach adopted in the proposed EMS,  effectively handles the large amount of data acquired from the  network. This parallel processing of acquired data speeds up the  execution process. All electrical parameters obtained during this  process are stored in an encrypted local database that can be  utilized for fault analysis and load prediction. Further  integration of machine learning tools in proposed EMS assists in  automated power network reconfiguration and tuning under  harsh battlefield situations