Future of Automotive Embedded Hardware Trust Anchors (AEHTA)

2022-01-0122

03/29/2022

Event
WCX SAE World Congress Experience
Authors Abstract
Content
The current automotive electronic and electrical (EE) architecture has reached a scalability limit and in order to adapt to the new and upcoming requirements, novel automotive EE architectures are currently being investigated to support: a) an Ethernet backbone, b) consolidation of hardware capabilities leading to a centralized architecture from an existing distributed architecture, c) optimization of wiring to reduce cost, and d) adaptation of service-oriented software architectures. These requirements lead to the development of Zonal EE architectures as a possible solution that require appropriate adaptation of used security mechanisms and the corresponding utilized hardware trust anchors.
  1. 1
    The current architecture approaches (ECU internal and in-vehicle networking) are being pushed to their limits, simultaneously, the current embedded security solutions also seem to reveal their limitations due to an increase in connectivity. In conjunction with an increasing number of related laws and regulations (such as UNECE R155 and ISO 21434), these drive security requirements in different domains and areas.
  2. 2
    In this paper we examine the upcoming trends in EE architectures and investigate the underlying cyber-security threats and corresponding security requirements that lead to potential requirements for “Automotive Embedded Hardware Trust Anchors” (AEHTA). We see that communication requirements including increased feature set (such as Authenticated Encryption for Associated Data (AEAD) and Authentication of Associated Data (AAD)) and increased performance requirements significantly impact the architecture of AEHTA. Additionally, we try to point out how new smart solutions could improve overall performance of applications needing security mechanisms.
  3. 3
    We show, that the overall impact of new security requirements on AEHTA can be categorized into security feature set, safety for security requirements and performance requirements.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/2022-01-0122
Pages
14
Citation
Ambekar, A., Schneider, R., Schmidt, K., and Dannebaum, U., "Future of Automotive Embedded Hardware Trust Anchors (AEHTA)," SAE Technical Paper 2022-01-0122, 2022, https://doi.org/10.4271/2022-01-0122.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Mar 29, 2022
Product Code
2022-01-0122
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English