Malicious DHCP Starvation Attack - SPECTRE | ||
The International Undergraduate Research Conference | ||
Article 9, Volume 1, First International Undergraduate Research Conference, IUGRC, 2016, Pages 91-91 PDF (381.18 K) | ||
Document Type: Original Article | ||
DOI: 10.21608/iugrc.2016.91143 | ||
Authors | ||
Mohammed Saleh1; Ahmed Hesham1; Emad S. Othman2 | ||
1High Institute of Computers & Information Technology AL-Shorouk Academy, Cairo – Egypt. | ||
2Ass. Prof., Senior Member IEEE - Region 8, AL-Shorouk Academy, Cairo – Egypt. | ||
Abstract | ||
Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol is a method for assigning Internet Protocol (IP) addresses permanently or to individual computers in an organization’s network. DHCP lets a network administrator supervise and distribute IP addresses from a central point and automatically sends a new IP address when a computer is plugged into a different place in the network. DHCP is an unauthenticated protocol : When connecting to a network, the user is not required to provide credentials in order to obtain a lease. Malicious users with physical access to the DHCP-enabled network can instigate a denial-of-service attack on DHCP servers by requesting many leases from the server, thereby reducing the number of leases that are available to other DHCP clients. | ||
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