Zhenkai Zhang, Zihao Zhan, D. Balasubramanian, B. Li, P. Völgyesi, X. Koutsoukos
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引用次数: 26
摘要
该漏洞属于由软件引起的硬件故障,并已被广泛利用,形成了强大的回旋锤攻击。然而,如何有效地检测此类攻击仍然是一个具有挑战性的问题。在本文中,我们提出了一种名为RADAR (Rowhammer Attack Detection via a Radio)的新方法,该方法利用某些电磁(EM)信号来检测Rowhammer攻击。特别是,我们发现在DRAM时钟信号的频谱中存在可识别的锤击相关边带模式。由于这种模式是敲打DRAM的不可避免的物理副作用,它们可以“暴露”任何潜在的rowhammer攻击,包括隐藏在加密和隔离环境(如英特尔SGX飞地)中的极其难以捉摸的攻击。然而,由于在计算机系统中普遍使用扩频时钟(SSC),感兴趣的模式可能变得不明显。我们提出了一种去扩频的方法,可以重组被SSC散射的锤击相关边带模式。使用一种通用的分类技术,我们可以实现有效和稳健的基于检测的防御,以抵御滚锤攻击,正如在各种场景下的雷达原型上所评估的那样。此外,我们的RADAR不会对受保护系统施加任何性能开销。之前很少有研究使用物理侧信道信息来执行锤防御,据我们所知,这是第一次利用EM侧信道信息来实现这一目的。
Leveraging EM Side-Channel Information to Detect Rowhammer Attacks
The rowhammer bug belongs to software-induced hardware faults, and has been exploited to form a wide range of powerful rowhammer attacks. Yet, how to effectively detect such attacks remains a challenging problem. In this paper, we propose a novel approach named RADAR (Rowhammer Attack Detection via A Radio) that leverages certain electromagnetic (EM) signals to detect rowhammer attacks. In particular, we have found that there are recognizable hammering-correlated sideband patterns in the spectrum of the DRAM clock signal. As such patterns are inevitable physical side effects of hammering the DRAM, they can "expose" any potential rowhammer attacks including the extremely elusive ones hidden inside encrypted and isolated environments like Intel SGX enclaves. However, the patterns of interest may become unapparent due to the common use of spread-spectrum clocking (SSC) in computer systems. We propose a de-spreading method that can reassemble the hammering-correlated sideband patterns scattered by SSC. Using a common classification technique, we can achieve both effective and robust detection-based defense against rowhammer attacks, as evaluated on a RADAR prototype under various scenarios. In addition, our RADAR does not impose any performance overhead on the protected system. There has been little prior work that uses physical side-channel information to perform rowhammer defenses, and to the best of our knowledge, this is the first investigation on leveraging EM side-channel information for this purpose.