CROct 13, 2021

SmashEx: Smashing SGX Enclaves Using Exceptions

arXiv:2110.06657v150 citations
Originality Highly original
AI Analysis

This exposes a critical security flaw in widely-used SGX runtimes, affecting systems relying on trusted execution environments for data protection.

The paper tackles the security of exception handling in Intel SGX enclaves by introducing SmashEx, an attack that exploits asynchronous exceptions to cause arbitrary memory disclosure and code-reuse attacks without relying on memory errors or side channels, demonstrating vulnerabilities in 10 out of 14 tested frameworks including Intel SGX SDK and Microsoft Open Enclave.

Exceptions are a commodity hardware functionality which is central to multi-tasking OSes as well as event-driven user applications. Normally, the OS assists the user application by lifting the semantics of exceptions received from hardware to program-friendly user signals and exception handling interfaces. However, can exception handlers work securely in user enclaves, such as those enabled by Intel SGX, where the OS is not trusted by the enclave code? In this paper, we introduce a new attack called SmashEx which exploits the OS-enclave interface for asynchronous exceptions in SGX. It demonstrates the importance of a fundamental property of safe atomic execution that is required on this interface. In the absence of atomicity, we show that asynchronous exception handling in SGX enclaves is complicated and prone to re-entrancy vulnerabilities. Our attacks do not assume any memory errors in the enclave code, side channels, or application-specific logic flaws. We concretely demonstrate exploits that cause arbitrary disclosure of enclave private memory and code-reuse (ROP) attacks in the enclave. We show reliable exploits on two widely-used SGX runtimes, Intel SGX SDK and Microsoft Open Enclave, running OpenSSL and cURL libraries respectively. We tested a total of 14 frameworks, including Intel SGX SDK and Microsoft Open Enclave, 10 of which are vulnerable. We discuss how the vulnerability manifests on both SGX1-based and SGX2-based platforms. We present potential mitigation and long-term defenses for SmashEx.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

Your Notes