Differential Fault Attacks on Deterministic Lattice Signatures
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.13154/tches.v2018.i3.21-43Keywords:
Differential fault attacks, post-quantum cryptography, lattice-based cryptography, digital signaturesAbstract
In this paper, we extend the applicability of differential fault attacks to lattice-based cryptography. We show how two deterministic lattice-based signature schemes, Dilithium and qTESLA, are vulnerable to such attacks. In particular, we demonstrate that single random faults can result in a nonce-reuse scenario which allows key recovery. We also expand this to fault-induced partial nonce-reuse attacks, which do not corrupt the validity of the computed signatures and thus are harder to detect.
Using linear algebra and lattice-basis reduction techniques, an attacker can extract one of the secret key elements after a successful fault injection. Some other parts of the key cannot be recovered, but we show that a tweaked signature algorithm can still successfully sign any message. We provide experimental verification of our attacks by performing clock glitching on an ARM Cortex-M4 microcontroller. In particular, we show that up to 65.2% of the execution time of Dilithium is vulnerable to an unprofiled attack, where a random fault is injected anywhere during the signing procedure and still leads to a successful key-recovery.
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Copyright (c) 2018 Leon Groot Bruinderink, Peter Pessl
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.