Skip to content
/ CJAG Public

CJAG is an open-source implementation of our cache-based jamming agreement.

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

IAIK/CJAG

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

8 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

CJAG

CJAG is an open-source implementation of our cache-based jamming agreement. The CJAG implementation can be used to establish a cross-VM cache covert channel. The CJAG test application in this repository is used to test a cache-based communication between two co-located virtual machines. It can also be used locally for test and research purposes.

A thorough description can be found in our whitepaper

A cache-based, robust covert channel based on CJAG can be found in our NDSS'17 paper

Table of contents

Prerequisites

CJAG consists of multiple C files. There is no dependency on any external library, thus the only required packages are

  • gcc
  • make

On Ubuntu, they can be installed using the package manager:

sudo apt-get install gcc make

As the program explicitly requests huge pages from the operating system, it requires support of the mmap flag MAP_HUGETLB. This is the case for any Linux kernel >= 2.6.32.

Furthermore, if huge pages are not configured, they have to be enabled. This can either be done temporarily by running

 sudo sysctl -w vm.nr_hugepages=32

or permanently by running

 echo "vm.nr_hugepages = 32" | sudo tee >> /etc/sysctl.conf

and rebooting afterwards.

Building CJAG from source

If all prerequisites are fulfilled, CJAG can be simply built by executing

make

This results in a cjag binary.

Using CJAG

The cjag binary includes both the sender and the receiver side. The sender side runs ./cjagwhereas the receiver side runs ./cjag -r.

If you test CJAG locally, the parameter auto detection should be able to figure out all parameters and CJAG will just work. If, however, it does not work, you have to manually tweak the parameters. Run ./cjag --help to get a list and explanation of all parameters. The most important ones are:

  • --cache-size: The size of the last-level cache (also called LLC or L3) in bytes.
  • --ways: The number of cache ways. Will usually be something like 12 or 16.
  • --slices: Usually the number of CPU cores (real cores, not hyperthreads). On modern CPUs it might sometimes also be the number of hyperthreads.
  • --threshold: The minimum number of cycles it takes to access data which is not cached. You can find this number by running the tool cachespeed from the subfolder cachespeed. Take the value in row "L3 miss" and column "+ mfence".
  • --delay: If your computer (or VM) is slow, try to increase this value. This gives CJAG more time to react on. Important: this value has to be the same for the sender and the receiver.

The whitepaper contains a table for these parameters for all environments we used to test CJAG (including Amazon EC2). If CJAG was successful, the sender will display Done. 100.00% of the channels are established, your system [ V U L N E R A B L E ]. For a thorough explanation of the program's output please refer to the whitepaper.

FAQ

  • I really like the auto detection/eviction set generation/eviction strategy/< insert any part here >. Can I use it in my own project?

    Yes, all parts of CJAG are open source and you are free to use it in your projects.

  • I get *[ERROR] Could not retrieve cache sets, please try to restart*

    Most likely some cache parameters are wrong. Maybe the auto detection did not work (happens on virtual machines) or you messed up some numbers. Check the specifications of your host CPU and try again.

  • It does not work!

    Did you check that all the parameters are correct? Try to play around with the threshold and delay parameter. You should also check the whitepaper, section 4.3 "Common Errors".

  • My cloud provider only has CPUs where the number of slices is not a power of 2.

    Currently, the cache slice functions for such CPUs are not known. As soon as someone reverse engineers the functions (or Intel releases them), we will update the program.

  • This is nice, but can you release your full covert channel?

    We will not release the full covert channel. However, using CJAG as a base, the remaining covert channel is just (a lot of) engineering work.

About

CJAG is an open-source implementation of our cache-based jamming agreement.

Resources

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published