CacheQuote: Efficiently Recovering Long-term Secrets of SGX EPID via Cache Attacks

Authors

  • Fergus Dall University of Adelaide
  • Gabrielle De Micheli University of Pennsylvania
  • Thomas Eisenbarth University of Lübeck; Worcester Polytechnic Institute
  • Daniel Genkin University of Pennsylvania; University of Maryland
  • Nadia Heninger University of Pennsylvania
  • Ahmad Moghimi Worcester Polytechnic Institute
  • Yuval Yarom University of Adelaide; Data61

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.13154/tches.v2018.i2.171-191

Keywords:

SGX, Side-Channel attacks, EPID, hidden number problem, Zero-Knowledge Proofs

Abstract

Intel Software Guard Extensions (SGX) allows users to perform secure computation on platforms that run untrusted software. To validate that the computation is correctly initialized and that it executes on trusted hardware, SGX supports attestation providers that can vouch for the user’s computation. Communication with these attestation providers is based on the Extended Privacy ID (EPID) protocol, which not only validates the computation but is also designed to maintain the user’s privacy. In particular, EPID is designed to ensure that the attestation provider is unable to identify the host on which the computation executes. In this work we investigate the security of the Intel implementation of the EPID protocol. We identify an implementation weakness that leaks information via a cache side channel. We show that a malicious attestation provider can use the leaked information to break the unlinkability guarantees of EPID. We analyze the leaked information using a lattice-based approach for solving the hidden number problem, which we adapt to the zero-knowledge proof in the EPID scheme, extending prior attacks on signature schemes.

Published

2018-05-08

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

CacheQuote: Efficiently Recovering Long-term Secrets of SGX EPID via Cache Attacks. (2018). IACR Transactions on Cryptographic Hardware and Embedded Systems, 2018(2), 171-191. https://doi.org/10.13154/tches.v2018.i2.171-191