Exploiting the analog properties of digital circuits for malicious hardware

Abstract

While the move to smaller transistors has been a boon for performance it has dramatically increased the cost to fabricate chips using those smaller transistors. This forces the vast majority of chip design companies to trust a third party---often overseas---to fabricate their design. To guard against shipping chips with errors (intentional or otherwise) chip design companies rely on post-fabrication testing. Unfortunately, this type of testing leaves the door open to malicious modifications since attackers can craft attack triggers requiring a sequence of unlikely events, which will never be encountered by even the most diligent tester. In this paper, we show how a fabrication-time attacker can leverage analog circuits to create a hardware attack that is small (i.e., requires as little as one gate) and stealthy (i.e., requires an unlikely trigger sequence before affecting a chip's functionality). In the open spaces of an already placed and routed design, we construct a circuit that uses capacitors to siphon charge from nearby wires as they transit between digital values. When the capacitors are fully charged, they deploy an attack that forces a victim flip-flop to a desired value. We weaponize this attack into a remotely controllable privilege escalation by attaching the capacitor to a controllable wire and by selecting a victim flip-flop that holds the privilege bit for our processor. We implement this attack in an OR1200 processor and fabricate a chip. Experimental results show that the purposed attack works. It eludes activation by a diverse set of benchmarks and evades known defenses.

Document Details

Document Type
Pub Defense Publication
Publication Date
Aug 23, 2017
Source ID
10.1145/3068776

Entities

People

  • Dennis Sylvester
  • Kaiyuan Yang
  • Matthew Hicks
  • Qing Dong
  • Todd Austin

Organizations

  • Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency
  • National Science Foundation
  • Rice University
  • University of Michigan
  • Virginia Tech

Tags

Fields of Study

  • Computer science

Readers

  • Educational Psychology
  • Integrated Circuit Design and Technology.
  • Strategic Security Studies

Technology Areas

  • Space