Getting Started
Interested in side channel analysis? This page should help you get some ideas of where to start.
Hardware
ChipWhisperer is maintained by NewAE Technology Inc. The ChipWhisperer boards take away the frustration of setting up the hardware for side channel attacks.. You can get your hands on one of the boards at The NewAE Store. As of June 2016, The ChipWhisperer Lite (CW1173) is a great way to get started: it comes with a "victim" already connected, so you can start the tutorials out-of-the-box.
Software
ChipWhisperer's software is open-source and freely available online.
- If you want a nice, tidy download, check out the ChipWhisperer Releases. The information on this page will explain how to download and install the software.
- If you're familiar with Git, you can directly clone the ChipWhisperer Repository. This will get you a bleeding-edge copy of the software, which has the most recent bug fixes and the most recent bugs.
Tutorials
The tutorials on this wiki provide an introduction to ChipWhisperer. The main focus in these tutorials is breaking AES-128; if this is your main goal, start with these three tutorials:
- Tutorial B1 Building a SimpleSerial Project to get used to the ChipWhisperer framework
- Tutorial B2 Viewing Instruction Power Differences to experiment with capturing traces
- Tutorial B5 Breaking AES (Straightforward) to break AES!
A full list of tutorials is:
Further Reading
Some various papers, slides, books, and other places to look to get you excited about side channel analysis...
- The original paper on side channel analysis, which started all of this
- The NewAE Forum for support or inspiration
- Colin's 2013 Whitepaper on ChipWhisperer
- Colin's Slides from CHES2013
- The book Power Analysis Attacks, which is a great overview of the math involved and provides tons of examples of attacks
- The book Understanding Cryptography for an introduction to cryptography algorthms