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FPGA Fault Injection Attacks (ASU, KIT)

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A new technical paper titled “Hacking the Fabric: Targeting Partial Reconfiguration for Fault Injection in FPGA Fabrics” was published by researchers at Arizona State University and Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT).

Abstract
“FPGAs are now ubiquitous in cloud computing infrastructures and reconfigurable system-on-chip, particularly for AI acceleration. Major cloud service providers such as Amazon and Microsoft are increasingly incorporating FPGAs for specialized compute-intensive tasks within their data centers. The availability of FPGAs in cloud data centers has opened up new opportunities for users to improve application performance by implementing customizable hardware accelerators directly on the FPGA fabric. However, the virtualization and sharing of FPGA resources among multiple users open up new security risks and threats. We present a novel fault attack methodology capable of causing persistent fault injections in partial bitstreams during the process of FPGA reconfiguration. This attack leverages power-wasters and is timed to inject faults into bitstreams as they are being loaded onto the FPGA through the reconfiguration manager, without needing to remain active throughout the entire reconfiguration process. Our experiments, conducted on a Pynq FPGA setup, demonstrate the feasibility of this attack on various partial application bitstreams, such as a neural network accelerator unit and a signal processing accelerator unit.”

Find the technical paper here. October 2024.

Chaudhuri, J., Nassar, H., Gnad, D.R., Henkel, J., Tahoori, M.B. and Chakrabarty, K., 2024. Hacking the Fabric: Targeting Partial Reconfiguration for Fault Injection in FPGA Fabrics. arXiv preprint arXiv:2410.16497.



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