Jens Trautmann, Paul Krüger, Andreas Becher, Stefan Wildermann, Jürgen Teich
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Design, Calibration, and Evaluation of Real-Time Waveform Matching on an FPGA-based Digitizer at 10 GS/s
Digitizing side-channel signals at high sampling rates produces huge amounts of data, while side-channel analysis techniques only need those specific trace segments containing Cryptographic Operations (COs). For detecting these segments, waveform-matching techniques have been established comparing the signal with a template of the CO’s characteristic pattern. Real-time waveform matching requires highly parallel implementations as achieved by hardware design but also reconfigurability as provided by FPGAs to adapt the matching hardware to a specific CO pattern. However, currently proposed designs process the samples from analog-to-digital converters sequentially and can only process low sampling rates due to the limited clock speed of FPGAs.
In this paper, we present a parallel waveform-matching architecture capable of performing high-speed waveform matching on a high-end FPGA-based digitizer. We also present a workflow for calibrating the waveform-matching system to the specific pattern of the CO in the presence of hardware restrictions provided by the FPGA hardware. Our implementation enables waveform matching at 10 GS/s, offering a speedup of 50x compared to the fastest state-of-the-art implementation known to us. We demonstrate how to apply the technique for attacking the widespread XTS-AES algorithm using waveform matching to recover the encrypted tweak even in the presence of so-called systemic noise.
期刊介绍:
TRETS is the top journal focusing on research in, on, and with reconfigurable systems and on their underlying technology. The scope, rationale, and coverage by other journals are often limited to particular aspects of reconfigurable technology or reconfigurable systems. TRETS is a journal that covers reconfigurability in its own right.
Topics that would be appropriate for TRETS would include all levels of reconfigurable system abstractions and all aspects of reconfigurable technology including platforms, programming environments and application successes that support these systems for computing or other applications.
-The board and systems architectures of a reconfigurable platform.
-Programming environments of reconfigurable systems, especially those designed for use with reconfigurable systems that will lead to increased programmer productivity.
-Languages and compilers for reconfigurable systems.
-Logic synthesis and related tools, as they relate to reconfigurable systems.
-Applications on which success can be demonstrated.
The underlying technology from which reconfigurable systems are developed. (Currently this technology is that of FPGAs, but research on the nature and use of follow-on technologies is appropriate for TRETS.)
In considering whether a paper is suitable for TRETS, the foremost question should be whether reconfigurability has been essential to success. Topics such as architecture, programming languages, compilers, and environments, logic synthesis, and high performance applications are all suitable if the context is appropriate. For example, an architecture for an embedded application that happens to use FPGAs is not necessarily suitable for TRETS, but an architecture using FPGAs for which the reconfigurability of the FPGAs is an inherent part of the specifications (perhaps due to a need for re-use on multiple applications) would be appropriate for TRETS.