Authors
Thomas Ristenpart, Eran Tromer, Hovav Shacham, Stefan Savage
Publication date
2009/11/9
Book
Proceedings of the 16th ACM conference on Computer and communications security
Pages
199-212
Description
Third-party cloud computing represents the promise of outsourcing as applied to computation. Services, such as Microsoft's Azure and Amazon's EC2, allow users to instantiate virtual machines (VMs) on demand and thus purchase precisely the capacity they require when they require it. In turn, the use of virtualization allows third-party cloud providers to maximize the utilization of their sunk capital costs by multiplexing many customer VMs across a shared physical infrastructure. However, in this paper, we show that this approach can also introduce new vulnerabilities. Using the Amazon EC2 service as a case study, we show that it is possible to map the internal cloud infrastructure, identify where a particular target VM is likely to reside, and then instantiate new VMs until one is placed co-resident with the target. We explore how such placement can then be used to mount cross-VM side-channel attacks to extract …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
T Ristenpart, E Tromer, H Shacham, S Savage - Proceedings of the 16th ACM conference on Computer …, 2009