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A large-scale comprehensive evaluation of single-slice ring oscillator and PicoPUF bit cells on 28-nm Xilinx FPGAs

Authors :
Chongyan Gu
Neil Hanley
Chip-Hong Chang
Jack Miskelly
Weiqiang Liu
Maire O'Neill
School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering
Centre for Integrated Circuits and Systems
Source :
Gu, C, Chang, C H, Liu, W, Hanley, N, Miskelly, J & O’Neill, M 2021, ' A large-scale comprehensive evaluation of single-slice ring oscillator and PicoPUF bit cells on 28-nm Xilinx FPGAs ', Journal of Cryptographic Engineering, vol. 11, no. 3, pp. 227-238 . https://doi.org/10.1007/s13389-020-00244-5
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2020.

Abstract

Lightweight implementation of security primitives, e.g., physical unclonable functions (PUFs) and true random number generator, in field programmable gate array (FPGA) is crucial replacement of the conventional decryption key stored in battery-backed random access memory or E-Fuses for the protection of field reconfigurable assets. A slice is the smallest reconfigurable logic block in an Xilinx FPGA. The entropy exploitable from each slice of an FPGA is an important factor for the design of security primitives. Previous research has shown that the locations of slices can impact the quality of delay-based PUF designs implemented on FPGAs. To investigate the effect of the placement of each single-bit PUF cell free from the routing resource constraint between slices, single-bit ring oscillator (RO) and identity-based PUF design (Pi-coPUF) cells that can each be fully fitted into a single slice are evaluated. To accurately evaluate their statistical performance, data from a large number of devices are required. To this end, 217 Xilinx Artix-7 FPGAs has been employed to provide a large-scale comprehensive analysis for the two designs. This is the first time single-slice disorder-based security entities have been investigated and compared on 28-nm Xilinx FPGA. Uniqueness, uniformity, correlation, reliability, bit-aliasing and inentropy of each type of cell are evaluated for four different types of cell placement. Our experimental results corroborate that the location of both cell types in the FPGA affects their performances. For both cell types, the lower the correlation between devices, the higher the min-entropy and uniqueness. Overall, the min-entropy, correlation and uniqueness of PicoPUF are slightly higher than those of RO. Otherwise, the uniformity, bit-aliasing and reliability of the PicoPUF are slightly lower than those of the RO. Comparing the resource usage and metrics of the PicoPUF, ring oscillator PUF and some existing memory-based PUF implementations, PicoPUF stands out as a lightweight FPGA-based weak PUF design. The raw data for the PicoPUF design are made publicly available to enable the research community to use them for benchmarking and/or validation. Ministry of Education (MOE) Published version This work is supported by grants from the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) (EP/N508664/- CSIT2), the Singapore Ministry of Education AcRF Tier 1 Grant No. 2018-T1-001-131, the National Natural Science Foundation of China (62022041 and 61871216), the Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities China (NE2019102) and the Six Talent Peaks Project in Jiangsu Province (2018XYDXX-009).

Details

ISSN :
21908516 and 21908508
Volume :
11
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Cryptographic Engineering
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3aca8ed6c512192d130651df3d77c9bc
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s13389-020-00244-5