Abstract

In the realm of the Internet of Things (IoT), ensuring the security of communication links and evaluating the safety of nodes within these links remains a significant challenge. The continuous threat of anomalous links, harboring malicious switch nodes, poses risks to data transmission between edge nodes and between edge nodes and cloud data centers. To address this critical issue, we propose a novel trust evaluation based secure multi-path routing (TESM) approach for IoT. Leveraging the software-defined networking (SDN) architecture in the data transmission process between edge nodes, TESM incorporates a controller comprising a security verification module, a multi-path routing module, and an anomaly handling module. The security verification module ensures the ongoing security validation of data packets, deriving trust scores for nodes. Subsequently, the multi-path routing module employs multi-objective reinforcement learning to dynamically generate secure multiple paths based on node trust scores. The anomaly handling module is tasked with handling malicious switch nodes and anomalous paths. Our proposed solution is validated through simulation using the Ryu controller and P4 switches in an SDN environment constructed with Mininet. The results affirm that TESM excels in achieving secure data forwarding, malicious node localization, and the secure selection and updating of transmission paths. Notably, TESM introduces a minimal 12.4% additional forwarding delay and a 5.46% throughput loss compared to traditional networks, establishing itself as a lightweight yet robust IoT security defense solution.

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