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Hardware security creates a hardware-based security foundation for secure and reliable operation of systems and applications used in our modern life. The presence of design for security, security assurance, and general security design life cycle practices in product life cycle of many large semiconductor design and manufacturing companies these days indicates that the importance of hardware security has been very well observed in industry. However, the high cost, time, and effort for building security into designs and assuring their security - due to using many manual processes - is still an important obstacle for economy of secure product development. This paper presents several promising directions for automation of design for security and security assurance practices to reduce the overall time and cost of secure product development. First, we present security verification challenges of SoCs, possible vulnerabilities that could be introduced inadvertently by tools mapping a design model in one level of abstraction to its lower level, and our solution to the problem by automatically mapping security properties from one level to its lower level incorporating techniques for extension and expansion of the properties. Then, we discuss the foundation necessary for further automation of formal security analysis of a design by incorporating threat model and common security vulnerabilities into an intermediate representation of a hardware model to be used to automatically determine if there is a chance for direct or indirect flow of information to compromise confidentiality or integrity of security assets. Finally, we discuss a pre-silicon-based framework for practical and time-and-cost effective power-side channel leakage analysis, root-causing the side-channel leakage by using the automatically generated leakage profile of circuit nodes, providing insight to mitigate the side-channel leakage by addressing the high leakage nodes, and assuring the effectiveness of the mitigation by reprofiling the leakage to prove its acceptable level of elimination. We hope that sharing these efforts and ideas with the security research community can accelerate the evolution of security-aware CAD tools targeted to design for security and security assurance to enrich the ecosystem to have tools from multiple vendors with more capabilities and higher performance.more » « less
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Logic locking has emerged as a promising solution to protect integrated circuits against piracy and tampering. However, the security provided by existing logic locking techniques is often thwarted by Boolean satisfiability (SAT)-based oracle-guided attacks. Criteria for successful SAT attacks on locked circuits include: (i) the circuit under attack is fully combinational, or (ii) the attacker has scan chain access. To address the threat posed by SAT-based attacks, we adopt the dynamically obfuscated scan chain (DOSC) architecture and illustrate its resiliency against the SAT attacks when inserted into the scan chain of an obfuscated design. We demonstrate, both mathematically and experimentally, that DOSC exponentially increases the resiliency against key extraction by SAT attack and its variants. Our results show that the mathematical estimation of attack complexity correlates to the experimental results with an accuracy of 95% or better. Along with the formal proof, we model DOSC architecture to its equivalent combinational circuit and perform SAT attack to evaluate its resiliency empirically. Our experiments demonstrate that SAT attack on DOSC-inserted benchmark circuits timeout at minimal test time overhead, and while DOSC requires less than 1% area and power overhead.more » « less