ZombieLoad: Cross-Privilege-Boundary Data Sampling

Michael Schwarz, Moritz Lipp, Daniel Moghimi, Jo Van Bulck, Julian Stecklina, Thomas Prescher, Daniel Gruss

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingConference paperpeer-review

Abstract

In early 2018, Meltdown first showed how to read arbitrary kernel memory from user space by exploiting side-effects from transient instructions. While this attack has been mitigated through stronger isolation boundaries between user and kernel space, Meltdown inspired an entirely new class of fault-driven transient execution attacks. Particularly, over the past year, Meltdown-type attacks have been extended to not only leak data from the L1 cache but also from various other microarchitectural structures, including the FPU register file and store buffer. In this paper, we present the ZombieLoad attack which uncovers a novel Meltdown-type effect in the processor's previously unexplored fill-buffer logic. Our analysis shows that faulting load instructions (i.e., loads that have to be re-issued for either architectural or microarchitectural reasons) may transiently dereference unauthorized destinations previously brought into the fill buffer by the current or a sibling logical CPU. Hence, we report data leakage of recently loaded stale values across logical cores. We demonstrate ZombieLoad's effectiveness in a multitude of practical attack scenarios across CPU privilege rings, OS processes, virtual machines, and SGX enclaves. We discuss both short and long-term mitigation approaches and arrive at the conclusion that disabling hyperthreading is the only possible workaround to prevent this extremely powerful attack on current processors.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationCCS 2019 - Proceedings of the 2019 ACM SIGSAC Conference on Computer and Communications Security
PublisherACM/IEEE
Pages753-768
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 12 Nov 2019
Event26th ACM Conference on Computer and Communications Security: ACM CCS 2019 - London, United Kingdom
Duration: 11 Nov 201915 Nov 2019

Conference

Conference26th ACM Conference on Computer and Communications Security
Country/TerritoryUnited Kingdom
CityLondon
Period11/11/1915/11/19

Keywords

  • cs.CR

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