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Secure and sovereign: DFKI and partners work on trustworthy open chips for European electronics industry

| Press release | Industry 4.0 | Mobility | Smart Home & Assisted Living | IT Security | Cyber-Physical Systems | Bremen

Security chips are essential for many providers of electronic devices, from small personal devices to automobiles. They should be open, flexibly adaptable and, as far as possible, mathematically proven to be secure. For global value chains with numerous actors, the supply of such cost-efficient components represents a great challenge. Open source processors offer a versatile alternative, as long as their security can be. A joint research project is working on this, dubbed “Hardening the value chain through open source, trustworthy EDA tools and processors (HEP)”, which is funded by the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF).

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Development of freely accessible tools for the verification of open source processor designs

Trustworthiness and security are important in electronics. Their importance increases the more areas of everyday life are influenced by digitization and automation - such as driving a car or working in the smart home office. But how can these requirements be fulfilled when the individual components come from different manufacturers along a global value chain?

In order to find answers to this, the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) launched the “Trustworthy Electronics (ZEUS)” funding initiative. By researching, developing and using trustworthy electronics, greater technical sovereignty is to be created in Germany and Europe. To support this endeavor, a project consortium led by the Leibniz Institute for Innovative Microelectronics (IHP) is working on open source approaches for the design of computer chips: The HEP project, which was officially launched on March 1, 2021, aims to implement essential parts of the value chain of security-relevant chips through open source technologies.

The next generation of hardware

The focus of the HEP project is on RISC-V processors. RISC-V is a new, open and free instruction set architecture, describing how the processor can be used. RISC-V is considered as a promising open source standard for many areas of application. The aim of the project is to develop a hardened, formally verified RISC-V processor that can accelerate cryptographic operations with special hardware structures.

The hardening of the chip aims to reduce the potential for physical attacks on the system as much as possible. The modifiability of a verified RISC-V processor will enable secure applications for the Internet of Things and, for example, to establish a new standard in the automotive industry. Therefore, the project will also develop and implement extensions for open-source circuit design tools - so-called EDA tools - that integrate hardening measures into the circuits in an automated way.  In addition, the project investigates how hardware Trojans can be added during design or production and which protective measures are possible against such attacks.

At the German Research Center for Artificial Intelligence (DFKI), the focus lies on the tools for the RISC-V processor: The Cyber-Physical Systems research department (CPS), led by Prof. Dr. Rolf Drechsler, works on adding verification mechanisms to the system modelling language. “In the end, it is the formal verification of the system that creates the security and reliability that is indispensable in areas such as autonomous driving”, Prof. Dr. Christoph Lüth, HEP project lead at the DFKI, explains.

Industrial Liaison Group pursues further development - also in small and medium-sized companies

The demonstrator that the project consortium is working on will subsequently be used in industrial practice. For this purpose, an industrial liaison group will be established, in which the project partners will pursue the industry-oriented further development of the results. In addition to expanding expertise in IT hardware for the automotive industry and in the Internet of Things, the HEP project also aims to support small and medium-sized enterprises: Open-source processors will not only make it easier to enter the market, but will also ensure diversified value creation and supply chains, to reduce dependencies and strengthen competitiveness.

The HEP project is led by the Leibniz Institute for High Performance Microelectronics (IHP). The project partners are:

  • IAV GmbH Ingenieursgesellschaft Auto und Verkehr
  • Elektrobit Automotive GmbH
  • German Research Center for Artificial Intelligence GmbH (DFKI)
  • Fraunhofer Institute for Secure Information Technology (SIT)
  • RheinMain University of Applied Sciences, Research Area "Smart Systems for People and Technology" (SSMT)
  • Ruhr University Bochum, Chair for Security Engineering
  • Technical University of Berlin, Department Security in Telecommunications

Associated partners are CARIAD SE (A Volkswagen Group Company), HENSOLDT Cyber GmbH, Hyperstone GmbH, Robert Bosch GmbH and Swissbit Germany AG. The Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) is funding the HEP project with around 3.64 million euros over a period of three years.

Grant number: ME1ZEUS012