Moats and Drawbridges: An Isolation Primitive for Reconfigurable Hardware Based Systems

Abstract

Blurring the line between software and hardware, reconfigurable devices strike a balance between the raw high speed of custom silicon and the post-fabrication flexibility of general-purpose processors. While this flexibility is a boon for embedded system developers, who can now rapidly prototype and deploy solutions with performance approaching custom designs, this results in a system development methodology where functionality is stitched together from a variety of "soft IP cores," often provided by multiple vendors with different levels of trust. Unlike traditional software where resources are managed by an operating system, soft IP cores necessarily have very fine grain control over the underlying hardware. To address this problem, the embedded systems community requires novel security primitives which address the realities of modern reconfigurable hardware. We propose an isolation primitive, moats and drawbridges, that are built around four design properties: logical isolation, interconnect traceability, secure reconfigurable broadcast, and configuration scrubbing. Each of these is a fundamental operation with easily understood formal properties, yet maps cleanly and efficiently to a wide variety of reconfigurable devices. We carefully quantify the required overheads on real FPGAs and demonstrate the utility of our methods by applying them to the practical problem of memory protection.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
May 01, 2007
Accession Number
ADA517143

Entities

People

  • Brett Brotherton
  • Cynthia Irvine
  • Gang Wang
  • Ryan Kastner
  • Ted Huffmire
  • Thuy Nguyen
  • Timothy Levin
  • Timothy Sherwood

Organizations

  • University of California, Santa Barbara

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Advanced Electronics

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Aerospace Industry
  • Aircrafts
  • Application-Specific Integrated Circuits
  • Authentication
  • Circuits
  • Computer Programming
  • Computer Programs
  • Computer Science
  • Computers
  • Embedded Systems
  • Field Programmable Gate Arrays
  • Intellectual Property
  • Intrusion Detection
  • Law
  • Operating Systems
  • Semiconductors
  • Software-Defined Hardware

Fields of Study

  • Computer science

Readers

  • Educational Psychology
  • Integrated Circuit Design and Technology.
  • Parallel and Distributed Computing.