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ICDCSW
2002
IEEE

Quantifying Effect of Network Latency and Clock Drift on Time-Driven Key Sequencing

13 years 9 months ago
Quantifying Effect of Network Latency and Clock Drift on Time-Driven Key Sequencing
Time-driven Key Sequencing (TKS) is a key management technique that synchronizes the session key used by a set of communicating principals based on time of day. This relatively low cost method of session key synchronization has been used in specialized distributed systems with low-end communicating devices where sessions are sparse and each session spans a short time period comprising a small number of messages. In this paper, we describe how TKS may be useful in several scenarios involving high speed computer networks. More importantly, we present a performance model of TKS and conduct a detailed analysis to determine the impact of clock drift and network latency on the required key refresh rate. We give the exact conditions for determining the range of adequate key refresh rates, and demonstrate that the derived conditions are sufficient to ensure that data are both protected and deliverable. Interestingly, these conditions may be used to obtain a key refresh rate that can tolerate...
Geoffrey G. Xie, Cynthia E. Irvine, Timothy E. Lev
Added 14 Jul 2010
Updated 14 Jul 2010
Type Conference
Year 2002
Where ICDCSW
Authors Geoffrey G. Xie, Cynthia E. Irvine, Timothy E. Levin
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