EU - SCARD - Side Channel Analysis Resistant Design Flow

  • Mangard, Stefan (Teilnehmer (Co-Investigator))
  • Herbst, Christoph (Teilnehmer (Co-Investigator))
  • Wolkerstorfer, Johannes (Teilnehmer (Co-Investigator))
  • Oswald, Maria Elisabeth (Teilnehmer (Co-Investigator))
  • Popp, Thomas (Teilnehmer (Co-Investigator))
  • Tillich, Stefan (Teilnehmer (Co-Investigator))
  • Aigner, Manfred Josef (Projektleiter (Principal Investigator))
  • Schmaranz, Klaus (Teilnehmer (Co-Investigator))

Projekt: Forschungsprojekt

Projektdetails

Beschreibung

The threat of side-channel attacks is of crucial importance when designing systems with cryptographic hardware or software. Especially smart cards and related micro-chip systems have shown considerable vulnerabilities in this respect. Side-channel attacks analyze and exploit the information produced by some system by, for example, measuring its power consumption or the electro-magnetic emanation of this system. From these traces the attacker can potentially make conclusions about the secret data involved in a computation inside the system. Meanwhile, simple power analysis (SPA), differential power analysis (DPA), and their related attacks, simple and differential electro-magnetic emanation analysis (SEMA, DEMA), became known to a broader public, and thus pose the biggest threat. In the following, we will refer to these side-channel analysis methods and related attacks by using the acronym SCA. In SCARD, we propose to enhance the typical micro-chip design flow – from high level system description over register transfer layer description down to gate level net lists, and finally placement & routing of the micro-chip – in order to provide a means for designing side-channel resistant circuits and systems. Moreover, we intend to study the whole phenomenon of SCA in a consistent manner, and will also provide appropriate analysis tools and design tools for the designer of secure systems. We consider these additional ingredients of the traditional design flow of micro-chips as necess
StatusAbgeschlossen
Tatsächlicher Beginn/ -es Ende1/01/0430/06/06

Fingerprint

Erkunden Sie die Forschungsthemen, die von diesem Projekt angesprochen werden. Diese Bezeichnungen werden den ihnen zugrunde liegenden Bewilligungen/Fördermitteln entsprechend generiert. Zusammen bilden sie einen einzigartigen Fingerprint.