DocumentCode
605501
Title
Privilege escalation attack through address space identifier corruption in untrusted modern processors
Author
Maniatakos, Michail
Author_Institution
Electr. & Comput. Eng. Dept., New York Univ. Abu Dhabi, Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates
fYear
2013
fDate
26-28 March 2013
Firstpage
161
Lastpage
166
Abstract
Privilege escalation attacks are one of the major threats jeopardizing microprocessor operation. Such attacks aim to maliciously increase the privilege level of the executed process, in order to access unauthorized resources. Modern microprocessors include complex memory management modules, with various different privilege levels and numerous ways to change the privilege level. In this paper, we present a malicious modification in the microprocessor process switch mechanism. Contrary to recent work presented in literature, the modification can be deployed during manufacturing process, as it consists of a trivial addition of a gate or wire sizing. The minimal footprint, however, comes at the cost of small window of attack opportunities. Experimental results show that a modification-aware application can gain escalated privileges within a few thousand clock cycles. Moreover, the malicious code has been added to SPEC benchmarks, and we show that the modified benchmarks can get escalated privileges before the end of typical workload, with minimal performance overhead.
Keywords
microprocessor chips; storage management chips; SPEC benchmarks; address space identifier corruption; gate sizing; malicious code; malicious modification; memory management modules; microprocessor process switch mechanism; modification aware application; performance overhead; privilege escalation attack; untrusted modern processors; wire sizing; Benchmark testing; Clocks; Hardware; Kernel; Microprocessors; Switches;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Design & Technology of Integrated Systems in Nanoscale Era (DTIS), 2013 8th International Conference on
Conference_Location
Abu Dhabi
Print_ISBN
978-1-4673-6039-5
Electronic_ISBN
978-1-4673-6038-8
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/DTIS.2013.6527798
Filename
6527798
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