Visible to the public Biblio

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2022-09-09
Vosatka, Jason, Stern, Andrew, Hossain, M.M., Rahman, Fahim, Allen, Jeffery, Allen, Monica, Farahmandi, Farimah, Tehranipoor, Mark.  2020.  Confidence Modeling and Tracking of Recycled Integrated Circuits, Enabled by Blockchain. 2020 IEEE Research and Applications of Photonics in Defense Conference (RAPID). :1—3.
The modern electronics supply chain is a globalized marketplace with the increasing threat of counterfeit integrated circuits (ICs) being installed into mission critical systems. A number of methods for detecting counterfeit ICs exist; however, effective test and evaluation (T&E) methods to assess the confidence of detecting recycled ICs are needed. Additionally, methods for the trustworthy tracking of recycled ICs in the supply chain are also needed. In this work, we propose a novel methodology to address the detection and tracking of recycled ICs at each stage of the electronics supply chain. We present a case study demonstrating our assessment model to calculate the confidence levels of authentic and recycled ICs, and to confidently track these types of ICs throughout the electronics supply chain.
2022-07-29
Rahman, M Sazadur, Li, Henian, Guo, Rui, Rahman, Fahim, Farahmandi, Farimah, Tehranipoor, Mark.  2021.  LL-ATPG: Logic-Locking Aware Test Using Valet Keys in an Untrusted Environment. 2021 IEEE International Test Conference (ITC). :180—189.
The ever-increasing cost and complexity of cutting-edge manufacturing and test processes have migrated the semiconductor industry towards a globalized business model. With many untrusted entities involved in the supply chain located across the globe, original intellectual property (IP) owners face threats such as IP theft/piracy, tampering, counterfeiting, reverse engineering, and overproduction. Logic locking has emerged as a promising solution to protect integrated circuits (ICs) against supply chain vulnerabilities. It inserts key gates to corrupt circuit functionality for incorrect key inputs. A logic-locked chip test can be performed either before or after chip activation (becoming unlocked) by loading the unlocking key into the on-chip tamperproof memory. However, both pre-activation and post-activation tests suffer from lower test coverage, higher test cost, and critical security vulnerabilities. To address the shortcomings, we propose LL-ATPG, a logic-locking aware test method that applies a set of valet (dummy) keys based on a target test coverage to perform manufacturing test in an untrusted environment. LL-ATPG achieves high test coverage and minimizes test time overhead when testing the logic-locked chip before activation without sharing the unlocking key. We perform security analysis of LL-ATPG and experimentally demonstrate that sharing the valet keys with the untrusted foundry does not create additional vulnerability for the underlying locking method.
2022-02-22
Farzana, Nusrat, Ayalasomayajula, Avinash, Rahman, Fahim, Farahmandi, Farimah, Tehranipoor, Mark.  2021.  SAIF: Automated Asset Identification for Security Verification at the Register Transfer Level. 2021 IEEE 39th VLSI Test Symposium (VTS). :1–7.
With the increasing complexity, modern system-onchip (SoC) designs are becoming more susceptible to security attacks and require comprehensive security assurance. However, establishing a comprehensive assurance for security often involves knowledge of relevant security assets. Since modern SoCs contain myriad confidential assets, the identification of security assets is not straightforward. The number and types of assets change due to numerous embedded hardware blocks within the SoC and their complex interactions. Some security assets are easily identifiable because of their distinct characteristics and unique definitions, while others remain in the blind-spot during design and verification and can be utilized as potential attack surfaces to violate confidentiality, integrity, and availability of the SoC. Therefore, it is essential to automatically identify security assets in an SoC at pre-silicon design stages to protect them and prevent potential attacks. In this paper, we propose an automated CAD framework called SAF to identify an SoC's security assets at the register transfer level (RTL) through comprehensive vulnerability analysis under different threat models. Moreover, we develop and incorporate metrics with SAF to quantitatively assess multiple vulnerabilities for the identified security assets. We demonstrate the effectiveness of SAF on MSP430 micro-controller and CEP SoC benchmarks. Our experimental results show that SAF can successfully and automatically identify an SoC's most vulnerable underlying security assets for protection.
2021-10-04
Farahmandi, Farimah, Sinanoglu, Ozgur, Blanton, Ronald, Pagliarini, Samuel.  2020.  Design Obfuscation versus Test. 2020 IEEE European Test Symposium (ETS). :1–10.
The current state of the integrated circuit (IC) ecosystem is that only a handful of foundries are at the forefront, continuously pushing the state of the art in transistor miniaturization. Establishing and maintaining a FinFET-capable foundry is a billion dollar endeavor. This scenario dictates that many companies and governments have to develop their systems and products by relying on 3rd party IC fabrication. The major caveat within this practice is that the procured silicon cannot be blindly trusted: a malicious foundry can effectively modify the layout of the IC, reverse engineer its IPs, and overproduce the entire chip. The Hardware Security community has proposed many countermeasures to these threats. Notably, obfuscation has gained a lot of traction - here, the intent is to hide the functionality from the untrusted foundry such that the aforementioned threats are hindered or mitigated. In this paper, we summarize the research efforts of three independent research groups towards achieving trustworthy ICs, even when fabricated in untrusted offshore foundries. We extensively address the use of logic locking and its many variants, as well as the use of high-level synthesis (HLS) as an obfuscation approach of its own.
2020-11-02
Duncan, Adam, Rahman, Fahim, Lukefahr, Andrew, Farahmandi, Farimah, Tehranipoor, Mark.  2019.  FPGA Bitstream Security: A Day in the Life. 2019 IEEE International Test Conference (ITC). :1—10.

Security concerns for field-programmable gate array (FPGA) applications and hardware are evolving as FPGA designs grow in complexity, involve sophisticated intellectual properties (IPs), and pass through more entities in the design and implementation flow. FPGAs are now routinely found integrated into system-on-chip (SoC) platforms, cloud-based shared computing resources, and in commercial and government systems. The IPs included in FPGAs are sourced from multiple origins and passed through numerous entities (such as design house, system integrator, and users) through the lifecycle. This paper thoroughly examines the interaction of these entities from the perspective of the bitstream file responsible for the actual hardware configuration of the FPGA. Five stages of the bitstream lifecycle are introduced to analyze this interaction: 1) bitstream-generation, 2) bitstream-at-rest, 3) bitstream-loading, 4) bitstream-running, and 5) bitstream-end-of-life. Potential threats and vulnerabilities are discussed at each stage, and both vendor-offered and academic countermeasures are highlighted for a robust and comprehensive security assurance.