This directory contains support files to formally verify the OTBN core using the tool Alma: Execution-aware Masking Verification.
Note that this flow is experimental. It has been developed using Yosys v0.15 (this also works: v0.9+4306 (git sha1 3931b3a03)), sv2v v0.0.9-24-gf868f06 and Verilator 4.106 (2020-12-02 rev v4.106). Other tool versions might not be compatible.
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Download the Alma tool from this specific repo and check out to the
coco-otbn-latest
branch of the toolgit clone [email protected]:abdullahvarici/coco-alma.git -b coco-otbn-latest
Enter the directory using
cd coco-alma
Set up a new virtual Python environment
python3 -m venv dev source dev/bin/activate
And install the Python requirements
pip3 install -r requirements.txt
Update
examples/otbn/config.json
to point correct locations forasm
,objdump
andrv_objdump
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Generate a Verilog netlist
A netlist of the DUT can be generated using the Yosys synthesis flow from the OpenTitan repository. From the OpenTitan top level, run
cd hw/ip/otbn/pre_syn
Set up the synthesis flow as described in the corresponding README. Then run the synthesis
./syn_yosys.sh
After downloading the Alma tool, installing dependencies and synthesizing OTBN, the masking can finally be formally verified.
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Enter the directory where you have downloaded Alma and load the virtual Python environment.
source dev/bin/activate
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Make sure to source the
build_consts.sh
script from the OpenTitan repository in order to set up some shell variables.source ../opentitan/util/build_consts.sh
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Launch the Alma tool to parse, assemble, trace (simulate) and formally verify the netlist. For simplicity, a single script is provided to launch all the required steps with a single command. Simply run:
${REPO_TOP}/hw/ip/otbn/pre_sca/alma/verify_otbn.sh
This should produce output similar to the one below:
Verifying OTBN using Alma Starting yosys synthesis... | CircuitGraph | Total: 234238 | Linear: 22351 | Non-linear: 107502 | Registers: 21338 | Mux: 41352 | parse.py successful (755.32s) INSTR_LIMIT = 128 Using program file: programs/isw_and.S Using build directory: [build_directory] Using netlist path: ../../tmp/circuit.v Wrote verilator testbench to [build_directory]/verilator_tb.c It produces output VCD at [build_directory]/circuit.vcd 1: Running verilator on given netlist 2: Compiling verilated netlist library 3: Compiling provided verilator testbench 4: Simulating circuit and generating VCD Line 0: WDR label found - u_otbn_core.u_otbn_rf_bignum.gen_rf_bignum_ff.u_otbn_rf_bignum_inner.rf [7800] = secret 0 Line 1: WDR label found - u_otbn_core.u_otbn_rf_bignum.gen_rf_bignum_ff.u_otbn_rf_bignum_inner.rf [7488] = secret 0 Line 2: WDR label found - u_otbn_core.u_otbn_rf_bignum.gen_rf_bignum_ff.u_otbn_rf_bignum_inner.rf [7176] = secret 1 Line 3: WDR label found - u_otbn_core.u_otbn_rf_bignum.gen_rf_bignum_ff.u_otbn_rf_bignum_inner.rf [6864] = secret 1 Line 4: WDR label found - u_otbn_core.u_otbn_rf_bignum.gen_rf_bignum_ff.u_otbn_rf_bignum_inner.rf [6552] = static_random | CircuitGraph | Total: 234238 | Linear: 22351 | Non-linear: 107502 | Registers: 21338 | Mux: 41352 | 0 nodes are ignored. tmp/circuit.vcd:57091: [WARNING] Entry for name clk_sys already exists in namemap (clk_sys -> #33) tmp/circuit.vcd:57110: [WARNING] Entry for name imem_wdata_i already exists in namemap (imem_wdata_i -> $33) tmp/circuit.vcd:57111: [WARNING] Entry for name imem_we_i already exists in namemap (imem_we_i -> &33) tmp/circuit.vcd:57112: [WARNING] Entry for name imem_wmask_i already exists in namemap (imem_wmask_i -> \'33) tmp/circuit.vcd:57116: [WARNING] Entry for name rst_sys_n already exists in namemap (rst_sys_n -> )33) Waiting for initial delay cycles: 139 RST value: 1 1 Building formula for cycle 0: vars 0 clauses 0 Checking cycle 0: Checking secret 0 [1, 2]: Checking secret 1 [3, 4]: RST value: 1 1 Building formula for cycle 1: vars 16 clauses 25 Checking cycle 1: Checking secret 0 [17, 18]: Checking secret 1 [19, 20]: RST value: 1 1 Building formula for cycle 2: vars 21103 clauses 57104 Checking cycle 2: Checking secret 0 [21427, 21104]: Checking secret 1 [21549, 21105]: RST value: 1 1 Building formula for cycle 3: vars 566836 clauses 1692708 Checking cycle 3: Checking secret 0 [630522, 652105]: Finished in 34.31 Writing a trace with the found error to [build_directory]/dbg-label-trace-0.txt Writing a reduced circuit to [build_directory]/tmp/dbg-circuit-0.dot The execution is not secure, here are some leaks: leak 0: (cycle: 3, cell: mux _10580_[0], id: 223382) 3 stable mux _10580_[0] vars : ['s0:0', 's0:1'] 3 stable mux _10580_[0] signals: u_otbn_core.u_otbn_rf_bignum.gen_rf_bignum_ff.u_otbn_rf_bignum_inner.rf[7800] ^ u_otbn_core.u_otbn_rf_bignum.gen_rf_bignum_ff.u_otbn_rf_bignum_inner.rf[7488]
Below we outline the individual steps performed by the verify_otbn.sh
script.
This is useful if you, e.g., want to verify the masking of your own module.
For more details, please refer to the Alma tutorial
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Make sure to source the
build_consts.sh
script from the OpenTitan repository in order to set up some shell variables.source ../opentitan/util/build_consts.sh
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The first step involves the parsing of the synthesized netlist.
python3 parse.py --keep --top-module otbn_top_coco --log-yosys \ --source ${REPO_TOP}/hw/ip/otbn/pre_sca/alma/rtl/ram_1p.v \ ${REPO_TOP}/hw/ip/otbn/pre_syn/syn_out/latest/generated/otbn_core.alma.v \ ${REPO_TOP}/hw/ip/otbn/pre_sca/alma/rtl/otbn_top_coco.v
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Next, run the
assemble.py
script to generate memory initialization file for OTBN.program=isw_and cd examples/otbn python3 assemble.py --program programs/${program}.S \ --netlist ../../tmp/circuit.v cd ../../
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Then, the Verilator testbench can be compiled and run. This step is required to identify control signals.
python3 trace.py --testbench tmp/verilator_tb.c \ --netlist tmp/circuit.v \ --c-compiler gcc \ --make-jobs 16
Add
-b
argument to use cached object files from a previous Verilator run and save some time. -
Next, the automatically generated labeling file
tmp/labels.txt
needs to be adapted. This file tells Alma which inputs of the DUT correspond to the secret shares and which ones are used to provide randomness for (re-)masking. It is pretty tedious to compute the actual indices for bignum register file labels. Generate it with the following command:examples/otbn/labels/generate_bignum_rf_labels.py \ -i examples/otbn/labels/${program}_labels.txt \ -o tmp/labels_updated.txt -w 1 -s 0
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Finally the verification of the masking implementation can be started.
python3 verify.py --json tmp/circuit.json \ --top-module otbn_top_coco \ --label tmp/labels_updated.txt \ --vcd tmp/circuit.vcd \ --checking-mode per-location \ --rst-name rst_sys_n \ --rst-phase 0 \ --rst-cycles 2 \ --init-delay 139 \ --excluded-signals u_otbn_core.u_otbn_controller.rf_bignum_intg_err_i[0] \ --dbg-signals otbn_cycle_cnt_o \ --cycles 25 \ --mode stable
Run the following command to see the waveform:
gtkwave tmp/circuit.vcd
Run the following command to see the circuit diagramm if there is a leakage:
xdot tmp/dbg-circuit-0.dot