In a communication network, the responsiveness of the transmission rate of
data packets to packet drops is quantified for an aggregate of flows as
opposed to on a per-flow basis. In an Aggregate Perturbation Method
(APM), a small number of data packets is intentionally dropped from the
aggregate at a switching node and a response thereto is measured. Traffic
not conforming to the predetermined transmission control protocol may be
discovered as a decrement in the reduction in traffic rate compared to
that anticipated based on the rate of dropped packets. To prevent
interference from the simultaneous application of APM at multiple
switching nodes, an orthogonal drop rate signature defining the
instantaneous drop rate is assigned thereto. The orthogonal drop rate
signature is based on the code division multiple access (CDMA) coding of
data, and for that reason, APM with the application of orthogonal drop
rate signatures is termed CDMA-based APM, or CAPM. APM or CAPM may be
utilized as a component in fair congestion control or in mitigating
distributed denial of service (DDoS) attacks of the Internet.