SRAM-SUC: Ultra-Low Latency Robust Digital PUF
Secret Unknown Ciphers (SUC) have been proposed recently as digital clone-resistant functions overcoming some of Physical(ly) Unclonable Functions (PUF) downsides, mainly their inconsistency because of PUFs analog nature. In this paper, we propose a new practical mechanism for creating internally random ciphers in modern volatile and non-volatile SoC FPGAs, coined as SRAM-SUC. Each created random cipher inside a SoC FPGA constitutes a robust digital PUF. This work also presents a class of involutive SUCs, optimized for the targeted SoC FPGA architecture, as sample realization of the concept; it deploys a generated class of involutive 8-bit S-Boxes, that are selected randomly from a defined large set through an internal process inside the SoC FPGA. Hardware and software implementations show that the resulting SRAM-SUC has ultra-low latency compared to well-known PUF-based authentication mechanisms. SRAM-SUC requires only 2.88/0.72 μ s to generate a response for a challenge at 50/200 MHz respectively. This makes SRAM-SUC a promising and appealing solution for Ultra-Reliable Low Latency Communication (URLLC).
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