This is a proof-of-concept exploit of the PortSmash microarchitecture attack, tracked by CVE-2018-5407.
More technical details about the PortSmash side-channel are available in this manuscript.
This software is licensed under the terms of the Apache License, Version 2.0.
Check LICENSE and NOTICE for more details.
A CPU featuring SMT (e.g. Hyper-Threading) is the only requirement.
This exploit code should work out of the box on Skylake and Kaby Lake. For other SMT architectures, customizing the strategies and/or waiting times in spy
is likely needed.
Download and install OpenSSL 1.1.0h or lower:
cd /usr/local/src
wget https://www.openssl.org/source/openssl-1.1.0h.tar.gz
tar xzf openssl-1.1.0h.tar.gz
cd openssl-1.1.0h/
export OPENSSL_ROOT_DIR=/usr/local/ssl
./config -d shared --prefix=$OPENSSL_ROOT_DIR --openssldir=$OPENSSL_ROOT_DIR -Wl,-rpath=$OPENSSL_ROOT_DIR/lib
make -j8
make test
sudo checkinstall --strip=no --stripso=no --pkgname=openssl-1.1.0h-debug --provides=openssl-1.1.0h-debug --default make install_sw
If you use a different path, you'll need to make changes to Makefile
and sync.sh
.
Turns off frequency scaling and TurboBoost.
Sync trace through pipes. It has two victims, one of which should be active at a time:
- The stock
openssl
runningdgst
command to produce a P-384 signature. - A harness
ecc
that calls scalar multiplication directly with a known key. (Useful for profiling.)
The script will generate a P-384 key pair in secp384r1.pem
if it does not already exist.
The script outputs data.bin
which is what openssl dgst
signed, and you should be able to verify the ECDSA signature data.sig
afterwards with
openssl dgst -sha512 -verify secp384r1.pem -signature data.sig data.bin
In the ecc
tool case, data.bin
and secp384r1.pem
are meaningless and data.sig
is not created.
For the taskset
commands in sync.sh
, the cores need to be two logical cores of the same physical core; sanity check with
$ grep '^processor\|^core id' /proc/cpuinfo
processor : 0
core id : 0
processor : 1
core id : 1
processor : 2
core id : 2
processor : 3
core id : 3
processor : 4
core id : 0
processor : 5
core id : 1
processor : 6
core id : 2
processor : 7
core id : 3
So the script is currently configured for logical cores 3 and 7 (processor
) that both map to physical core 3 (core_id
).
Measurement process that outputs measurements in timings.bin
. To change the spy
strategy, check the port defines in spy.h
. Only one strategy should be active at build time.
Note that timings.bin
is actually raw clock cycle counter values, not latencies. Look in parse_raw_simple.py
to understand the data format if necessary.
Victim harness for running OpenSSL scalar multiplication with known inputs. Example:
./ecc M 4 deadbeef0123456789abcdef00000000c0ff33
Will execute 4 consecutive calls to EC_POINT_mul
with the given hex scalar.
Quick and dirty hack to view 1D traces. The top plot is the raw trace. Everything below is a different digital filter of the raw trace for viewing purposes. Zoom and pan are your friends here.
You might have to adjust the CEIL
variable if the plots are too aggressively clipped.
Python packages:
sudo apt-get install python-numpy python-matplotlib python-scipy
Optional but recommended to view peaks:
sudo pip install --upgrade scipy
Turn off frequency scaling:
./freq.sh
Make sure everything builds:
make clean
make
Take a measurement:
./sync.sh
View the trace:
python parse_raw_simple.py timings.bin
You can play around with one victim at a time in sync.sh
. Sample output for the openssl dgst
victim is in parse_raw_simple.png
.
- Alejandro Cabrera Aldaya (Universidad Tecnológica de la Habana (CUJAE), Habana, Cuba)
- Billy Bob Brumley (Tampere University, Tampere, Finland)
- Sohaib ul Hassan (Tampere University, Tampere, Finland)
- Cesar Pereida García (Tampere University, Tampere, Finland)
- Nicola Tuveri (Tampere University, Tampere, Finland)
This project has received funding from the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme (grant agreement No 804476).