Abstract-In this paper, we study networked control systems in the presence of Denial-of-Service (DoS) attacks, namely attacks that prevent transmissions over the communication network. The control objective is to maximize frequency and duration of the DoS attacks under which closed-loop stability is not destroyed. Analog and digital predictor-based controllers with state resetting are proposed, which achieve the considered control objective for a general class of DoS signals. An example is given to illustrate the proposed solution approach.
Abstract-In this paper, we study networked control systems in the presence of Denial-of-Service (DoS) attacks, namely attacks that prevent transmissions over the communication network. The control objective is to maximize frequency and duration of the DoS attacks under which closed-loop stability is not destroyed. Analog and digital predictor-based controllers with state resetting are proposed, which achieve the considered control objective for a general class of DoS signals. An example is given to illustrate the proposed solution approach.
We study communication-constrained networked control problems for linear time-invariant systems in the presence of Denialof-Service (DoS) attacks, namely attacks that prevent transmissions over the communication network. Our work aims at exploring the trade-offs between system resilience and network bandwidth capacity. Given a class of DoS attacks, we characterize the bit-rate conditions that are dependent on the unstable eigenvalues of the dynamic matrix of the plant and the parameters of DoS attacks, under which exponential stability of the closed-loop system can be guaranteed. Our characterization clearly shows the trade-offs between the communication bandwidth and resilience against DoS. An example is given to illustrate the proposed approach.
We study communication-constrained networked control problems for linear time-invariant systems in the presence of Denialof-Service (DoS) attacks, namely attacks that prevent transmissions over the communication network. Our work aims at exploring the trade-offs between system resilience and network bandwidth capacity. Given a class of DoS attacks, we characterize the bit-rate conditions that are dependent on the unstable eigenvalues of the dynamic matrix of the plant and the parameters of DoS attacks, under which exponential stability of the closed-loop system can be guaranteed. Our characterization clearly shows the trade-offs between the communication bandwidth and resilience against DoS. An example is given to illustrate the proposed approach.
In this paper, we study networked systems in the presence of Denial-of-Service (DoS) attacks, namely attacks that prevent transmissions over the communication network. Previous studies have shown that co-located architectures (control unit co-located with the actuators and networked sensor channel) can ensure a high level of robustness against DoS. However, co-location requires a wired or dedicated actuator channel, which could not meet flexibility and cost requirements. In this paper we consider a control architecture that approximates co-location while enabling remote implementation (networked sensor and actuator channels). We analyze closed-loop stability and quantify the robustness "gap" between this architecture and the co-located one.
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