Eilertson, Eric2010-04-092010-04-092007-10https://hdl.handle.net/11299/60293University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. October 2007. Major: Computer Science. Advisors: Kumar, Vipin, Zhang, Zhi-li. 1 computer file (PDF); vi, 107 pages.As the number, severity and sophistication of computer network attacks increase network administrators have an increasingly difficult time identifying and cleaning up compromised computers. In this thesis some of the areas where existing tools and techniques are deficient are identified, and possible solutions are proposed and evaluated on synthetic as well as real networks. This thesis has four major contributions. The first is a lightweight semi-stateful network data capture module. The second contribution is a framework for storing and accessing raw packet information as well as meta information, such as network sessions. The third contribution is a set of analysis routines for identifying computer network attacks, and computers that have been successfully compromised. The fourth contribution is a framework for iteratively building and analyzing the communication patterns of networked computers. This allows security analysts and researchers to identify compromised computers, as well as perform forensic analysis to answer questions like What computer compromised this computer? When did the compromise occur? How did the compromise happen? What data was stolen or modified?en-USScan detectionContext extractionData miningData storageNetwork securityComputer ScienceA data collection, storage, and analysis framework for network security.Thesis or Dissertation