English

GLoP: Enabling Massively Parallel Incident Response Through GPU Log Processing

Distributed, Parallel, and Cluster Computing 2017-04-10 v1 Cryptography and Security

Abstract

Large industrial systems that combine services and applications, have become targets for cyber criminals and are challenging from the security, monitoring and auditing perspectives. Security log analysis is a key step for uncovering anomalies, detecting intrusion, and enabling incident response. The constant increase of link speeds, threats and users, produce large volumes of log data and become increasingly difficult to analyse on a Central Processing Unit (CPU). This paper presents a massively parallel Graphics Processing Unit (GPU) LOg Processing (GLoP) library and can also be used for Deep Packet Inspection (DPI), using a prefix matching technique, harvesting the full power of off-the-shelf technologies. GLoP implements two different algorithm using different GPU memory and is compared against CPU counterpart implementations. The library can be used for processing nodes with single or multiple GPUs as well as GPU cloud farms. The results show throughput of 20Gbps and demonstrate that modern GPUs can be utilised to increase the operational speed of large scale log processing scenarios, saving precious time before and after an intrusion has occurred.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1704.02278,
  title  = {GLoP: Enabling Massively Parallel Incident Response Through GPU Log Processing},
  author = {Xavier Bellekens and Christos Tachtatzis and Robert Atkinson and Craig Renfrew and Tony Kirkham},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1704.02278},
  year   = {2017}
}

Comments

Published in The 7th International Conference of Security of Information and Networks, SIN 2014, Glasgow, UK, September, 2014

R2 v1 2026-06-22T19:11:01.166Z