Abstract
In recent years, with the rapid development of Internet services in all walks of life, a large number of malicious acts such as network attacks, data leakage, and information theft have become major challenges for network security. Due to the difficulty of malicious traffic collection and labeling, the distribution of various samples in the existing dataset is seriously imbalanced, resulting in low accuracy of malicious traffic classification based on machine learning and deep learning, and poor model generalization ability. In this paper, a feature image representation method and Adversarial Generative Network with Filter (Filter-GAN) are proposed to solve these problems. First, the feature image representation method divides the original session traffic into three parts. The Markov matrix is extracted from each part to form a three-channel feature image. This method can transform the original session traffic format into a uniform-length matrix and fully characterize the network traffic. Then, Filter-GAN uses the feature images to generate few attack samples. Compared with general methods, Filter-GAN can generate more efficient samples. Experiments were conducted on public datasets. The results show that the feature image representation method can effectively characterize the original session traffic. When the number of samples is sufficient, the classification accuracy can reach 99%. Compared with unbalanced datasets, Filter-GAN has significantly improved the recognition accuracy of small-sample datasets, with a maximum improvement of 6%.
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