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An architecture for secure software defined radio
Chunxiao Li   Raghunathan, A.   Jha, N.K.  
Dept. of EE, Princeton Univ., Princeton, NJ;

This paper appears in: Design, Automation & Test in Europe Conference & Exhibition, 2009. DATE '09.
Publication Date: 20-24 April 2009
On page(s): 448-453
Location: Nice,
ISSN: 1530-1591
ISBN: 978-1-4244-3781-8
INSPEC Accession Number: 10730459
Current Version Published: 2009-06-23

Abstract
Software defined radio (SDR) is a rapidly evolving technology which implements some functional modules of a radio system in software executing on a programmable processor. SDR provides a flexible mechanism to reconfigure the radio, enabling networked devices to easily adapt to user preferences and the operating environment. However, the very mechanisms that provide the ability to reconfigure the radio through software also give rise to serious security concerns such as unauthorized modification of the software, leading to radio malfunction and interference with other users' communications. Both the SDR device and the network need to be protected from such malicious radio reconfiguration. In this paper, we propose a new architecture to protect SDR devices from malicious reconfiguration. The proposed architecture is based on robust separation of the radio operation environment and user application environment through the use of virtualization. A secure radio middleware layer is used to intercept all attempts to reconfigure the radio, and a security policy monitor checks the target configuration against security policies that represent the interests of various parties. Therefore, secure reconfiguration can be ensured in the radio operation environment even if the operating system in the user application environment is compromised. We have prototyped the proposed secure SDR architecture using VMware and the GNU Radio toolkit, and demonstrate that the overheads incurred by the architecture are small and tolerable. Therefore, we believe that the proposed solution could be applied to address SDR security concerns in a wide range of both general-purpose and embedded computing systems.

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