ignoramous 7 hours ago

If you're looking for a quick overview, Satnam Singh who worked at Google on Silver Oak / OpenTitan, gave an interesting 50m talk related to his work: https://youtube.com/watch?v=ujmgPCIWuU4 / mirror: https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/ujmgPCIWuU4 [summary: https://g.co/gemini/share/07c6439e8a78 / mirror: https://archive.vn/51k4y]

OpenTitan (RISC-V based tamper-resistant open specification RoT/TPM/SE) themselves have a neat write-up on designing against hardware attacks: https://opentitan.org/book/doc/security/implementation_guide... / mirror: https://archive.vn/UqAVo

klop1 15 hours ago

I actually did these a while ago. Courses taught me a lot and have recommended it to friends since. Very grateful for the course team for making everything public :)

  • Akhilmurali 15 hours ago

    Hey! I was curious how did you get access to the lectures? You said that the material is public, can you please help me locate the lecture vidoes?

    • stavros 10 hours ago

      I have the same question, I'd love to watch the presentations in my own time, but I don't want to sign up for something that will have strict deadlines, as my schedule doesn't allow that.

      Does anyone know which kind of the two above this course is? I couldn't find that info.

oytis 12 hours ago

Somewhat unrelated, but - is it just me or do other people notice too, that whenever a major university publishes course materials online, the instructors there are normally very young? It wasn't like that a while ago, e.g. when Coursera started, or it is not like that if you look at older MIT videos.

Does it reflect university teachers getting younger? Or younger teachers tend to give more effort to putting everything online? Or did my perception change with age?

  • jprx 43 minutes ago

    Personally, I learned programming when I was a kid by watching YouTube tutorials + reading random Internet sources. When helping build SHD, it was important to me that we "paid it forward" & made all our lab materials open for everyone to learn from.

    Hopefully someone out there finds it useful!

  • porridgeraisin 8 hours ago

    Younger teachers get "out there" for the same class of reasons software developers today want to be more "out there" - website,twitter,etc - compared to the relatively quieter personal websites of the last generation.

mettamage 15 hours ago

Reminds me of hardware security at VUSEC Amsterdam :)

Good times!

brcmthrowaway 20 hours ago

Does this include Spectre?

  • jprx 17 hours ago

    Yes!

    Our labs include building your own real spectre attack against the kernel, bypassing ASLR and building ROP chains with various side channels, finding and exploiting backdoors in a RISC-V CPU by building a hardware fuzzer, and more.

    (source: I designed the Spectre lab plus a few others)

    All our labs are fully open source for anyone to try: https://github.com/MATCHA-MIT/SHD-StarterCode

    If you give them a try, please do let us know what you think! We genuinely want these activities to be fun and approachable (we designed them like a big CTF) and welcome feedback from the community.

    • SilverSlash 13 hours ago

      Any plans to make lecture videos available as well?

    • brcmthrowaway 16 hours ago

      Do you support arm64e?

      • jprx an hour ago

        We teach using Intel X86_64 CPUs for a variety of reasons

        - Most academic research has been done on Intel systems, so it's easier for students reading papers to relate to their experiences in the labs

        - X86_64 provides convenient cache flush and cycle measurement instructions in userspace

        - Intel's strongly ordered memory model and cache inclusion policy makes cross-core side channels simpler to reason about

        - Practically, it's easier to scale up server infrastructure on Intel (you can do most of the labs on inexpensive Intel-based Linux systems)

        - For Rowhammer, our students attack one particular kind of DRAM that we have profiled and know works well with our machines

        - Note that AMD's cache inclusion policy differs from Intel's- we only support Intel chips for now

        Down the road I could see us moving to ARM for a few labs (perhaps a future PACMAN attack lab...?)

  • LPisGood 20 hours ago

    It starts with necessary background into cache side channels and covers transient execution attacks like Spectre.

oicu 18 hours ago

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