Łukasz Chmielewski

2papers

2 Papers

CRSep 24, 2021
Rosita++: Automatic Higher-Order Leakage Elimination from Cryptographic Code

Madura A. Shelton, Łukasz Chmielewski, Niels Samwel et al.

Side-channel attacks are a major threat to the security of cryptographic implementations, particularly for small devices that are under the physical control of the adversary. While several strategies for protecting against side-channel attacks exist, these often fail in practice due to unintended interactions between values deep within the CPU. To detect and protect from side-channel attacks, several automated tools have recently been proposed; one of their common limitations is that they only support first-order leakage. In this work, we present the first automated tool for detecting and eliminating higher-order leakage from cryptographic implementations. Rosita++ proposes statistical and software-based tools to allow high-performance higher-order leakage detection. It then uses the code rewrite engine of Rosita (Shelton et al. NDSS 2021) to eliminate detected leakage. For the sake of practicality we evaluate Rosita++ against second and third order leakage, but our framework is not restricted to only these orders. We evaluate Rosita++ against second-order leakage with three-share implementations of two ciphers, PRESENT and Xoodoo, and with the second-order Boolean-to-arithmetic masking, a core building block of masked implementations of many cryptographic primitives, including SHA-2, ChaCha and Blake. We show effective second-order leakage elimination at a performance cost of 36% for Xoodoo, 189% for PRESENT, and 29% for the Boolean-to-arithmetic masking. For third-order analysis, we evaluate Rosita++ against the third-order leakage using a four-share synthetic example that corresponds to typical four-share processing. Rosita++ correctly identified this leakage and applied code fixes.

CRDec 15, 2017
Side-channel based intrusion detection for industrial control systems

Pol Van Aubel, Kostas Papagiannopoulos, Łukasz Chmielewski et al.

Industrial Control Systems are under increased scrutiny. Their security is historically sub-par, and although measures are being taken by the manufacturers to remedy this, the large installed base of legacy systems cannot easily be updated with state-of-the-art security measures. We propose a system that uses electromagnetic side-channel measurements to detect behavioural changes of the software running on industrial control systems. To demonstrate the feasibility of this method, we show it is possible to profile and distinguish between even small changes in programs on Siemens S7-317 PLCs, using methods from cryptographic side-channel analysis.