Publication | Closed Access
Reconciling remote attestation and safety-critical operation on simple IoT devices
12
Citations
20
References
2018
Year
Unknown Venue
EngineeringRemote DiagnosticsInformation SecurityIot SecuritySoftware AnalysisFormal VerificationHardware SecurityRemote AttestationSystems EngineeringTrusted Execution EnvironmentInternet Of ThingsHardware Security SolutionMalware DetectionOperating System SecurityComputer EngineeringComputer ScienceSecure Remote AttestationSecurity Testing MethodData SecurityCryptographySoftware SecuritySoftware Testing
Remote attestation (RA) is a means of malware detection, typically realized as an interaction between a trusted verifier and a potentially compromised remote device (prover). RA is especially relevant for low-end embedded devices that are incapable of protecting themselves against malware infection. Most current RA techniques require on-demand and uninterruptible (atomic) operation. The former fails to detect transient malware that enters and leaves between successive RA instances; the latter involves performing potentially time-consuming computation over prover's memory and/or storage, which can be harmful to the device's safety-critical functionality and general availability. However, relaxing either on-demand or atomic RA operation is tricky and prone to vulnerabilities. This paper identifies some issues that arise in reconciling requirements of safety-critical operation with those of secure remote attestation, including detection of transient and self-relocating malware. It also investigates mitigation techniques, including periodic self-measurements as well as interruptible attestation modality that involves shuffled memory traversals and various memory locking mechanisms.
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