DocumentCode
177306
Title
Flipping bits in memory without accessing them: An experimental study of DRAM disturbance errors
Author
Yoongu Kim ; Daly, Ross ; Kim, Jung-Ho ; Fallin, Chris ; Ji Hye Lee ; Donghyuk Lee ; Wilkerson, Chris ; Lai, Koonchun ; Mutlu, Onur
Author_Institution
Carnegie Mellon Univ., Pittsburgh, PA, USA
fYear
2014
fDate
14-18 June 2014
Firstpage
361
Lastpage
372
Abstract
Memory isolation is a key property of a reliable and secure computing system-an access to one memory address should not have unintended side effects on data stored in other addresses. However, as DRAM process technology scales down to smaller dimensions, it becomes more difficult to prevent DRAM cells from electrically interacting with each other. In this paper, we expose the vulnerability of commodity DRAM chips to disturbance errors. By reading from the same address in DRAM, we show that it is possible to corrupt data in nearby addresses. More specifically, activating the same row in DRAM corrupts data in nearby rows. We demonstrate this phenomenon on Intel and AMD systems using a malicious program that generates many DRAM accesses. We induce errors in most DRAM modules (110 out of 129) from three major DRAM manufacturers. From this we conclude that many deployed systems are likely to be at risk. We identify the root cause of disturbance errors as the repeated toggling of a DRAM row´s wordline, which stresses inter-cell coupling effects that accelerate charge leakage from nearby rows. We provide an extensive characterization study of disturbance errors and their behavior using an FPGA-based testing platform. Among our key findings, we show that (i) it takes as few as 139K accesses to induce an error and (ii) up to one in every 1.7K cells is susceptible to errors. After examining various potential ways of addressing the problem, we propose a low-overhead solution to prevent the errors.
Keywords
DRAM chips; field programmable gate arrays; AMD systems; DRAM accesses; DRAM cells; DRAM chips; DRAM disturbance errors; DRAM modules; DRAM process technology; FPGA-based testing platform; Intel; charge leakage; intercell coupling effects; malicious program; memory address; memory bit flipping; memory isolation; reliable computing system; secure computing system; Acceleration; Artificial intelligence; DRAM chips; Organizations; Testing; Timing;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Computer Architecture (ISCA), 2014 ACM/IEEE 41st International Symposium on
Conference_Location
Minneapolis, MN
Print_ISBN
978-1-4799-4396-8
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ISCA.2014.6853210
Filename
6853210
Link To Document