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New Rowhammer attacks give complete control of machines running Nvidia GPUs

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Why This Matters

The discovery of new Rowhammer attacks targeting Nvidia GPUs highlights a significant security vulnerability in high-performance hardware used in cloud and enterprise environments. These exploits could allow malicious users to gain full control of affected systems, posing risks to data integrity and security. As GPUs become increasingly integral to computing infrastructure, understanding and mitigating such hardware-based threats is crucial for industry resilience and consumer safety.

Key Takeaways

The cost of high-performance GPUs, typically $8,000 or more, means they are frequently shared among dozens of users in cloud environments. Two new attacks demonstrate how a malicious user can gain full root control of a host machine by performing novel Rowhammer attacks on high-performance GPU cards made by Nvidia.

The attacks exploit memory hardware’s increasing susceptibility to bit flips, in which 0s stored in memory switch to 1s and vice versa. In 2014, researchers first demonstrated that repeated, rapid access—or “hammering”—of memory hardware known as DRAM creates electrical disturbances that flip bits. A year later, a different research team showed that by targeting specific DRAM rows storing sensitive data, an attacker could exploit the phenomenon to escalate an unprivileged user to root or evade security sandbox protections. Both attacks targeted DDR3 generations of DRAM.

From CPU to GPU: Rowhammer’s decade-long journey

Over the past decade, dozens of newer Rowhammer attacks have evolved to, among other things:

The last feat proved that GDDR was susceptible to Rowhammer attacks, but the results were modest. The researchers achieved only eight bitflips, a small fraction of what has been possible on CPU DRAM, and the damage was limited to degrading the output of a neural network running on the targeted GPU.