Researcher Collab

Information flow isolation in I2C and USB

Proceedings of the 34th Design Automation Conference

Flight control, banking, medical, and other high assurance systems have a strict requirement on correct operation. Fundamental to this is the enforcement of non-interference where particular subsystems should not affect one another. In an effort to help guarantee this policy, recent work has emerged with tracking information flows at the hardware level. This article uses a specific method known as gate-level information flow tracking (GLIFT) to provide a methodology for testing information flows in two common bus protocols, I2C and USB. We show that the protocols do elicit unintended information flows and provide a solution based on time division multiple access (TDMA) that provably isolates devices on the bus from these flows. This paper also discusses the overheads in area and simulation time incurred by this TDMA based solution.

Authors: Jason Oberg, Wei Hu, Ali Irturk, Mohit Tiwari, Timothy Sherwood, Ryan Kastner

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1145/2024724.2024782

Publish Year: 2011