A newly discovered security vulnerability in modern Intel and AMD processors could let remote attackers steal encryption keys via a power side channel attack.
Dubbed Hertzbleed by a group of researchers from the University of Texas, the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, and the University of Washington, the issue is rooted in dynamic voltage and frequency scaling (DVFS), a power and thermal management feature employed to conserve power and reduce the amount of heat generated by a chip.
“The cause is that, under certain circumstances, periodic CPU frequency adjustments depend on the current CPU power consumption, and these adjustments directly translate to execution time differences (as 1 hertz = 1 cycle per second),” the researchers said.
This can have significant security implications on cryptographic libraries even when implemented correctly as constant-time code to prevent timing-based side channels, effectively enabling an attacker to leverage the execution time variations to extract sensitive information such as cryptographic keys.
Both AMD (CVE-2022-23823) and Intel (CVE-2022-24436) have issued independent advisories in response to the findings, with the latter noting that all Intel processors are affected by Hertzbleed. No patches have been made available.
“As the vulnerability impacts a cryptographic algorithm having power analysis-based side channel leakages, developers can apply countermeasures on the software code of the algorithm. Either masking, hiding, or key-rotation may be used to mitigate the attack,” AMD stated.
For its part, Intel said it does not “believe this attack to be practical outside of a lab environment.” It further recommended that cryptographic developers follow its guidance to harden their libraries and applications against frequency throttling information disclosure.
This is not the first time novel methods have been uncovered to siphon data from Intel processors. In March 2021, two co-authors of Hertzbleed demonstrated an “on-chip, cross-core” side channel attack targeting the ring interconnect used in Intel Coffee Lake and Skylake processors.
“The takeaway is that current cryptographic engineering practices for how to write constant-time code are no longer sufficient to guarantee constant time execution of software on modern, variable-frequency processors,” the researchers concluded.