Skywing: Open-source software aids collaborative autonomy applications
Collaborative-autonomy software applications allow a group of networked devices to collaboratively detect, gather, identify and interpret data; defend against cyber-attacks; and continue to operate despite infiltration.
A new software developed at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL), and known as Skywing, provides domain scientists working to protect the nation’s critical infrastructure with a high-reliability, real-time software platform for collaborative autonomy applications.
The U.S. modern critical infrastructure — from the electrical grid that sends power to homes to the pipelines that deliver water and natural gas and the railways and roadways we travel — is full of digitized components.
In a power grid, this includes distributed energy resources (DERs) such as smart meters, solar inverters, power-quality sensors and protection devices that are geographically spread out, programmable and network connected.
These networks, as currently designed, typically rely on a single control center for analysis and decision making.
“Unfortunately, control centers offer a cybersecurity single point of failure,” said computational mathematician Colin Ponce of Global Security’s E Program. “We need to design our systems so that if the control center or one of the devices is hacked and infiltrated in a cyberattack, the entire system doesn’t shut down or give attackers complete control over our critical infrastructure.”
To defend against cyber-attacks and harden the system, LLNL multidisciplinary teams of mathematicians, systems analysts, power engineers, cybersecurity experts and computational scientists have turned to collaborative autonomy — a new class of computational techniques that teach networked devices how to self-organize into a collective whole.
“Collaborative autonomy can monitor the system, detect improper commands, isolate compromised devices or control centers and protect system efficiency and stability so it keeps operating the way it’s supposed to,” Ponce said.
Ponce and his team have developed Skywing — an open-source, high-reliability, real-time, decentralized software platform for domain scientists, mathematicians and computer scientists exploring collaborative-autonomy applications for critical infrastructure.
Skywing provides approaches and solutions for real-world applications that solve problems and allow for confidence in the results. It also helps lower the barrier to entry for those who may lack fluency in decentralized software development.
Skywing provides automated search-and-acquire functionality for devices to find data. To perform tasks with the data, Skywing also offers a set of asynchronous consensus algorithms that allows devices to “gossip” back and forth with each other until they come to an agreement on a solution. Users can then apply these algorithms as building blocks to construct more advanced applications.
Using collaborative autonomy, networked devices can self-organize into a collective whole to reliably monitor, defend itself and function the way it’s supposed to. “No single device or control point can compromise the entire system or precipitate network failure,” said computational mathematician and Skywing developer Colin Ponce.
“DERs come in all shapes and sizes and have a range of functions,” said Jovana Helms, associate program leader for Critical Infrastructure Cybersecurity at LLNL. “They also must operate in harsh, unreliable environments that are susceptible to both natural hazards and intentional attacks. We designed and developed Skywing to be universally applicable and very robust despite the operational environment.
“With collaborative autonomy in place, an adversary has to compromise many different devices rather than just one to achieve the same objective, making it much more difficult for them. We are using the inherent nature of our distributed system to our advantage, making it more resilient and secure,” Helms said.
“The expertise at the Lab and the range of skills here just aren’t available anywhere else. We’re able to approach these problems from a variety of perspectives and develop synergistic software solutions,” Ponce said.
Notes Nate Gleason, Cyber and Infrastructure Resilience program leader: “This is a big milestone for collaborative autonomy applications for infrastructure control systems, as it is now available to the broader research community and demonstrates LLNL’s leadership in this area.”
Skywing is available via Github.
-- Genevieve Sexton
Contact
Stephen Wampler[email protected]
(925) 423-3107
Related Links
Github“Defending U.S. Critical Infrastructure from Nation-State Cyberattacks”
“Building a Network of Collaborative Autonomous Machines”
“Collaborative Autonomy Work in E Program”
Tags
ASCHPC, Simulation, and Data Science
Computing
Global Security
Science