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Hardware Reverse Engineering Tools and Techniques

2019 SoutheastCon, 2019
The immediate goal of this work is to determine uses for different hardware reverse engineering tools, compare and contrast which tools correspond with desired tasks, and provide an outline to achieve hardware reverse engineering goals for students or entry level engineers.
Thomas Gordon   +3 more
exaly   +2 more sources

HAL—The Missing Piece of the Puzzle for Hardware Reverse Engineering, Trojan Detection and Insertion

IEEE Transactions on Dependable and Secure Computing, 2019
Hardware manipulations pose a serious threat to numerous systems, ranging from a myriad of smart-X devices to military systems. In many attack scenarios an adversary merely has access to the low-level, potentially obfuscated gate-level netlist. In general, the attacker possesses minimal information and faces the costly and time-consuming task of ...
Marc Fyrbiak   +2 more
exaly   +3 more sources

Reverse Engineering–Hardware and Software

2007
Reverse engineering (RE) is generally defined as a process of analyzing an object or existing system (hardware and software) to identify its components and their interrelationships and to investigate how it works to redesign or produce a copy without access to the design from which it was originally produced (Wikipedia, 2005).
D.T. Pham, L.C. Hieu
openaire   +1 more source

Hardware Trojan: Malware Detection Using Reverse Engineering and SVM

Advances in Intelligent Systems and Computing, 2018
Due to the globalization, advanced information and simplicity of computerized frameworks have left the substance of the advanced media greatly unreliable. Security concerns, particularly for integrated circuits (ICs) and systems utilized as a part of critical applications and cyber infrastructure have been encountered due to Hardware Trojan.
Sandeep Raghuwanshi
exaly   +2 more sources

Shielding CE Hardware Against Reverse-Engineering Attacks Through Functional Locking [Hardware Matters]

IEEE Consumer Electronics Magazine, 2018
The surging design productivity of modern consumer electronics (CE) devices has only been possible due to the employment of reusable intellectual property (IP) cores in its hardware design. However, the IP core design process is vulnerable to threats in the design flow such as reverse-engineering attacks that aim to clone (and pirate) or insert ...
Deepak Kachave, Anirban Sengupta
exaly   +2 more sources

A Survey on Hardware Security Techniques for Preventing Reverse Engineering Attacks

2023 International VLSI Symposium on Technology, Systems and Applications (VLSI-TSA/VLSI-DAT), 2023
exaly   +2 more sources

A Bitstream Reverse Engineering Tool for FPGA Hardware Trojan Detection

Proceedings of the 2018 ACM SIGSAC Conference on Computer and Communications Security, 2018
Since FPGAs are field-programmable and reconfigurable integrated circuits, there are many security concerns that malicious functions like hardware Trojans can be infiltrated into circuits not only in development stages but also in deployment stages -- malicious fabrication and modification are possible even after deployment.
Junghwan Yoon   +6 more
openaire   +1 more source

Improving on State Register Identification in Sequential Hardware Reverse Engineering

2019 IEEE International Symposium on Hardware Oriented Security and Trust (HOST), 2019
In the past years, new hardware reverse engineering methods for sequential gate-level netlists have been developed to detect Hardware Trojans and counteract Design Piracy. A critical part of sequential gate-level netlist reverse engineering is the identification of state registers. A promising method to solve this problem, RELIC, proposed by T.
Johanna Baehr, Georg Sigl
exaly   +2 more sources

The Power of IC Reverse Engineering for Hardware Trust and Assurance

EDFA Technical Articles, 2019
Abstract Integrated circuits embedded in everyday devices face an increased risk of tampering and intrusion. In this article, the authors explain how reverse engineering techniques, including automated image analysis, can be employed to provide trust and assurance when dealing with commercial off-the-shelf chips.
Fatemeh Ganji   +4 more
openaire   +1 more source

A Survey on Hardware Trojan Detection: Alternatives to Destructive Reverse Engineering

2021
System security has always been associated with the software being used on it. The hardware has been by default considered trusted. This root of trust for hardware has been violated after the emergence of Hardware Trojan (HT) attacks. Such attacks can be used by an adversary to leak important or secret information or to conduct a system failure.
Archit Saini, Gahan Kundra, Shruti Kalra
openaire   +1 more source

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