Biblio

Filters: Author is Zhang, Jiliang  [Clear All Filters]
2021-09-21
Wu, Qiang, Zhang, Jiliang.  2020.  CT PUF: Configurable Tristate PUF against Machine Learning Attacks. 2020 IEEE International Symposium on Circuits and Systems (ISCAS). :1–5.
Strong physical unclonable function (PUF) is a promising lightweight hardware security primitive for device authentication. However, it is vulnerable to machine learning attacks. This paper demonstrates that even a recently proposed dual-mode PUF is still can be broken. In order to improve the security, this paper proposes a highly flexible machine learning resistant configurable tristate (CT) PUF which utilizes the response generated in the working state of Arbiter PUF to XOR the challenge input and response output of other two working states (ring oscillator (RO) PUF and bitable ring (BR) PUF). The proposed CT PUF is implemented on Xilinx Artix-7 FPGAs and the experiment results show that the modeling accuracy of logistic regression and artificial neural network is reduced to the mid-50%.
2020-10-30
Zhang, Jiliang, Qu, Gang.  2020.  Physical Unclonable Function-Based Key Sharing via Machine Learning for IoT Security. IEEE Transactions on Industrial Electronics. 67:7025—7033.

In many industry Internet of Things applications, resources like CPU, memory, and battery power are limited and cannot afford the classic cryptographic security solutions. Silicon physical unclonable function (PUF) is a lightweight security primitive that exploits manufacturing variations during the chip fabrication process for key generation and/or device authentication. However, traditional weak PUFs such as ring oscillator (RO) PUF generate chip-unique key for each device, which restricts their application in security protocols where the same key is required to be shared in resource-constrained devices. In this article, in order to address this issue, we propose a PUF-based key sharing method for the first time. The basic idea is to implement one-to-one input-output mapping with lookup table (LUT)-based interstage crossing structures in each level of inverters of RO PUF. Individual customization on configuration bits of interstage crossing structure and different RO selections with challenges bring high flexibility. Therefore, with the flexible configuration of interstage crossing structures and challenges, crossover RO PUF can generate the same shared key for resource-constrained devices, which enables a new application for lightweight key sharing protocols.

2017-03-20
Qiu, Pengfei, Lyu, Yongqiang, Zhang, Jiliang, Wang, Xingwei, Zhai, Di, Wang, Dongsheng, Qu, Gang.  2016.  Physical Unclonable Functions-based Linear Encryption Against Code Reuse Attacks. Proceedings of the 53rd Annual Design Automation Conference. :75:1–75:6.

Recently, code reuse attacks (CRAs) have emerged as a new class of ingenious security threatens. Attackers can utilize CRAs to hijack the control flow of programs to perform malicious actions without injecting any codes. Existing defenses against CRAs often incur high memory and performance overheads or require extending the existing processors' instruction set architectures (ISAs). To tackle these issues, we propose a hardware-based control flow integrity (CFI) that employs physical unclonable functions (PUF)-based linear encryption architecture (LEA) to protect against CRAs with negligible hardware extending and run time overheads. The proposed method can protect ret and indirect jmp instructions from return oriented programming (ROP) and jump oriented programming (JOP) without any additional software manipulations and extending ISAs. The pre-process will be conducted on codes once the executable binary is loaded into memory, and the real-time control flow verification based on LEA can be done while ret and jmp instructions are executed. Performance evaluations on benchmarks show that the proposed method only introduces 0.61% run-time overhead and 0.63% memory overhead on average.