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Abstract
In their continuous growth and penetration into new markets, Field
Programmable Gate Arrays (FPGAs) have recently made their way into hardware
acceleration of machine learning among other specialized compute-intensive
services in cloud data centers, such as Amazon and Microsoft. To further
maximize their utilization in the cloud, several academic works propose the
spatial multi-tenant deployment model, where the FPGA fabric is simultaneously
shared among mutually mistrusting clients. This is enabled by leveraging the
partial reconfiguration property of FPGAs, which allows to split the FPGA
fabric into several logically isolated regions and reconfigure the
functionality of each region independently at runtime. In this paper, we survey
industrial and academic deployment models of multi-tenant FPGAs in the cloud
computing settings, and highlight their different adversary models and security
guarantees, while shedding light on their fundamental shortcomings from a
security standpoint. We further survey and classify existing academic works
that demonstrate a new class of remotely exploitable physical attacks on
multi-tenant FPGA devices, where these attacks are launched remotely by
malicious clients sharing physical resources with victim users. Through
investigating the problem of end-to-end multi-tenant FPGA deployment more
comprehensively, we reveal how these attacks actually represent only one
dimension of the problem, while various open security and privacy challenges
remain unaddressed. We conclude with our insights and a call for future
research to tackle these challenges.