Researchers uncover two speculative execution gadgets, TIKTAG-v1 and v2, that leak ARM MTE tags and bypass memory safety defenses in real-world systems like ChromeResearchers uncover two speculative execution gadgets, TIKTAG-v1 and v2, that leak ARM MTE tags and bypass memory safety defenses in real-world systems like Chrome

How TIKTAG Attacks Slip Past ARM’s Memory Tagging Defenses

Abstract

1. Introduction

2. Background

  • Memory Tagging Extension
  • Speculative Execution Attack

3. Threat Model

4. Finding Tag Leakage Gadgets

  • Tag Leakage Template
  • Tag Leakage Fuzzing

5. TIKTAG Gadgets

  • TIKTAG-v1: Exploiting Speculation Shrinkage
  • TIKTAG-v2: Exploiting Store-to-Load Forwarding

6. Real-World Attacks

6.1. Attacking Chrome

7. Evaluation

8. Related work

9. Conclusion And References

\

Related work

MTE Security Analysis. Partap et al. [51] analyzed the software-level MTE support in real-world memory allocators. Google Project Zero [38] explored speculative execution attacks against MTE hardware for the first time. StickyTags [22] identified an MTE tag leakage gadget (which is similar to TIKTAG-v1) and proposed a deterministic tagging-based defense that does not utilize random tags due to the potential tag leakage. Compared to StickyTags, our work identified a new type of MTE tag leakage gadget, TIKTAG-v2, and analyzed the root cause of both TIKTAG-v1 and TIKTAG-v2 gadgets.

\ We also demonstrated the realworld exploitation of TIKTAG gadgets in Google Chrome and the Linux kernel and proposed new defense mechanisms to mitigate the security risks posed by TIKTAG gadgets. While StickyTags proposed deterministic tagging due to the potential tag leakage, our work focuses on hardening the random tagging-based MTE defense, which are developed by major vendors including Google [39], the Linux kernel [26], and secure operating systems [23, 50, 63].

\ Speculative Attacks on Protection Mechanisms. Speculative probing [20] suggested that speculative execution can be used to probe address mappings and bypass address space layout randomization (ASLR). PACMAN [54] identified speculative gadgets that leak Pointer Authentication Code (PAC). ARMv8.6 FEAT_FPAC mitigates PACMAN attacks by authentication and memory access, allowing all memory accesses regardless of the authentication result [35]. MTE tag leakage can also be mitigated by separating tag check and memory access in the hardware, not allowing tag check results to affect memory access.

\ Transient Execution Attacks. Transient execution attacks exploit micro-architectural behaviors to leak secret information. Researchers have analyzed various micro-architectural implementations including speculative execution [30, 36, 66, 71], memory disambiguation prediction [24, 41, 45], and CPU internal buffers [67, 68]. Recent attacks exploited data prefetching behaviors to leak secret information or construct covert channels [14, 57, 59, 69]. Compared to these attacks, we identified for the first time that data prefetching behaviors can also be exploited to leak hardware exceptions, such as tag check faults (§5.1).

9. Conclusion

This paper explores the potential security risks posed by speculative execution attacks against ARM Memory Tagging Extension (MTE). We identify new MTE oracles, TIKTAG-v1 and TIKTAG v2, capable of leaking MTE tags from arbitrary memory addresses. TIKTAG gadgets can bypass MTE-based defense in real-world systems, including Google Chrome and the Linux kernel. Our findings provide significant insights into the design and deployment of both memory taggingbased hardware and software defenses.

\

References

[1] Gigacage. https://phakeobj.netlify.app/posts/gigacage/.

[2] base/allocator/partitionallocator/partitionbucket.cc. https: //source.chromium.org/chromium/chromium/src/+/main: base/allocator/partitionallocator/src/partitionalloc/partition_ bucket.cc?q=TagMemoryRangeRandomly&start=21.

[3] external/scudo/standalone/combined.h. https://cs. android.com/android/platform/superproject/main/+/main: external/scudo/standalone/combined.h;l=1225;drc= dd7fe3fedd9446067b06d31fdf6c191760405e6d;bpv=0;bpt=1.

[4] Pointer authentication on armv8.3, 2017. https://www.qualcomm.com/ media/documents/files/whitepaper-pointer-authentication-on-armv8- 3.pdf.

[5] Memory tagging extension, 2019. https://developer.arm.com/- /media/Arm%20Developer%20Community/PDF/ArmMemory TaggingExtensionWhitepaper.pdf.

[6] M. Abadi, M. Budiu, U. Erlingsson, and J. Ligatti. Control-flow integrity principles, implementations, and applications. In Proceedings of the ACM Transactions on Information and System Security, Nov. 2009.

[7] R. Abhishek, K. M. Bruce, and A. P. TONNERRE. Skipping tag check for tag-checked load operation, 2020. https://patents.google. com/patent/US11221951/.

[8] A. Agarwal, S. O’Connell, J. Kim, S. Yehezkel, D. Genkin, E. Ronen, and Y. Yarom. Spook. js: Attacking chrome strict site isolation via speculative execution. In Proceedings of the 42rd IEEE Symposium on Security and Privacy (Oakland), San Francisco, CA, May 2022.

[9] D. N. Armstrong, H. Kim, O. Mutlu, and Y. N. Patt. Wrong path events: Exploiting unusual and illegal program behavior for early misprediction detection and recovery. In Proceedings of the 37th Annual IEEE/ACM International Symposium on Microarchitecture (MICRO), Portland, OR, Dec. 2004.

[10] M. Bakhshalipour, P. Lotfi-Kamran, and H. Sarbazi-Azad. Domino temporal data prefetcher. In 2018 IEEE International Symposium on High Performance Computer Architecture (HPCA), pages 131–142. IEEE, 2018.

[11] G. S. Blog. Mte - the promising path forward for memory safety. https://security.googleblog.com/2023/11/mte-promising-pathforward-for-memory.html.

[12] L. CAI, K. Nathella, J. Lee, and S. Dam. Prefetch mechanism for a cache structure, 2020. https://patents.google.com/patent/ US11526356B2/.

[13] M. Castro, M. Costa, and T. Harris. Securing software by enforcing data-flow integrity. In Proceedings of the 7th USENIX Symposium on Operating Systems Design and Implementation (OSDI), Seattle, WA, Nov. 2006.

[14] Y. Chen, L. Pei, and T. E. Carlson. Afterimage: Leaking control flow data and tracking load operations via the hardware prefetcher. In Proceedings of the 28th ACM International Conference on Architectural Support for Programming Languages and Operating Systems (ASPLOS), Vancouver, Canada, Apr. 2023.

[15] Chromium. [pac] enable armv8.3 pac (pointer authentication code).

[16] M. W. Docs. Sharedarraybuffer. https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/ docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/SharedArrayBuffer. [17] eBPF. ebpf documentation. https://ebpf.io/what-is-ebpf/.

[18] J. Edge. Kernel address space layout randomization, 2013. https: //lwn.net/Articles/569635/.

[19] J. W. Fu, J. H. Patel, and B. L. Janssens. Stride directed prefetching in scalar processors. volume 23, pages 102–110. ACM New York, NY, USA, 1992.

[20] E. Göktas, K. Razavi, G. Portokalidis, H. Bos, and C. Giuffrida. Speculative probing: Hacking blind in the spectre era. In Proceedings of the 27th ACM Conference on Computer and Communications Security (CCS), Virtual, Nov. 2022.

[21] Google. Spectre, 2021. https://leaky.page.

[22] F. Gorter, T. Kroes, H. Bos, and C. Giuffrida. Sticky tags: Efficient and deterministic spatial memory error mitigation using persistent memory tags. In Proceedings of the 43rd IEEE Symposium on Security and Privacy (Oakland), San Francisco, CA, May 2024.

[23] GrapheneOS. hardenedmalloc. https://github.com/GrapheneOS/ hardenedmalloc.

[24] S. Islam, A. Moghimi, I. Bruhns, M. Krebbel, B. Gulmezoglu, T. Eisenbarth, and B. Sunar. {SPOILER}: Speculative load hazards boost rowhammer and cache attacks. In Proceedings of the 28th USENIX Security Symposium (Security), Santa Clara, CA, Aug. 2019.

[25] P. Z. Jann Horn. Reading privileged memory with a sidechannel. https://googleprojectzero.blogspot.com/2018/01/readingprivileged-memory-with-side.html.

[26] T. L. Kernel. Hardware tag-based kasan. https://docs.kernel.org/devtools/kasan.html#hardware-tag-based-kasan.

[27] J. Kim, S. van Schaik, D. Genkin, and Y. Yarom. ileakage: Browserbased timerless speculative execution attacks on apple devices. In Proceedings of the 30th ACM Conference on Computer and Communications Security (CCS), Copenhagen, Denmark, Nov. 2022.

[28] O. Kirzner and A. Morrison. An analysis of speculative type confusion vulnerabilities in the wild. In Proceedings of the 30th USENIX Security Symposium (Security), Virtual, Aug. 2021.

[29] S. Knox. Real-time kernel protection (rkp).

[30] P. Kocher, J. Horn, A. Fogh, D. Genkin, D. Gruss, W. Haas, M. Hamburg, M. Lipp, S. Mangard, T. Prescher, M. Schwarz, and Y. Yarom. Spectre attacks: Exploiting speculative execution. In Proceedings of the 40th IEEE Symposium on Security and Privacy (Oakland), San Jose, CA, May 2019.

[31] G. Li, H. Zhang, J. Zhou, W. Shen, Y. Sui, and Z. Qian. A hybrid alias analysis and its application to global variable protection in the linux kernel.

[32] H. Liljestrand, C. Chinea, R. Denis-Courmont, J.-E. Ekberg, and N. Asokan. Color my world: Deterministic tagging for memory safety. arXiv preprint arXiv:2204.03781, 2022.

[33] A. Limited. Cache speculation side-channels, . https://developer.arm. com/documentation/102816/0205/.

[34] A. Limited. Speculative oracles on memory tagging, . https://developer. arm.com/documentation/109544/latest.

[35] A. Limited. Pacman security vulnerability, . https://developer.arm. com/documentation/ka005109/latest/.

[36] M. Lipp, M. Schwarz, D. Gruss, T. Prescher, W. Haas, A. Fogh, J. Horn, S. Mangard, P. Kocher, D. Genkin, Y. Yarom, and M. Hamburg. Meltdown: Reading kernel memory from user space. In Proceedings of the 27th USENIX Security Symposium (Security), Baltimore, MD, Aug. 2018.

[37] G. P. Z. Mark Brand. Mte as implemented, part 3: The kernel, . https://googleprojectzero.blogspot.com/2023/08/mte-as-implementedpart-3-kernel.html.

[38] G. P. Z. Mark Brand. Mte as implemented, part 1: Implementation testing, . https://googleprojectzero.blogspot.com/2023/08/mte-asimplemented-part-1.html.

[39] G. P. Z. Mark Brand. First handset with mte on the market, 2023. https://googleprojectzero.blogspot.com/2023/11/first-handsetwith-mte-on-market.html.

[40] D. McKee, Y. Giannaris, C. O. Perez, H. Shrobe, M. Payer, H. Okhravi, and N. Burow. Preventing kernel hacks with hakc. In Proceedings of the 2022 Annual Network and Distributed System Security Symposium (NDSS), San Diego, CA, Apr. 2022.

[41] M. Minkin, D. Moghimi, M. Lipp, M. Schwarz, J. Van Bulck, D. Genkin, D. Gruss, F. Piessens, B. Sunar, and Y. Yarom. Fallout: Reading kernel writes from user space. In Proceedings of the 26th ACM Conference on Computer and Communications Security (CCS), London, UK, Nov. 2019.

[42] Mitre. Cve-2020-6449, . https://cve.mitre.org/cgi-bin/cvename.cgi? name=CVE-2020-6449.

[43] Mitre. Cve-2022-0185, . https://cve.mitre.org/cgi-bin/cvename.cgi? name=CVE-2022-0185.

[44] Mitre. Cve-2023-5217, . https://cve.mitre.org/cgi-bin/cvename.cgi? name=CVE-2023-5217.

[45] MITRE. Cve-2018-3639. https://cve.mitre.org/cgi-bin/cvename.cgi? name=CVE-2018-3639.

[46] MITRE. CVE-2019-2215., 2019. https://cve.mitre.org/cgi-bin/ cvename.cgi?name=CVE-2019-2215.

[47] K. Mitsunami. Delivering enhanced security through memory tagging extension. https://community.arm.com/arm-communityblogs/b/architectures-and-processors-blog/posts/enhanced-securitythrough-mte.

[48] O. Oleksenko, C. Fetzer, B. Köpf, and M. Silberstein. Revizor: Testing black-box cpus against speculation contracts. In Proceedings of the 42rd IEEE Symposium on Security and Privacy (Oakland), San Francisco, CA, May 2022.

[49] J. Olšan. Cortex-x3: the new fastest core from arm (architecture analysis). https://fuse.wikichip.org/news/6855/arm-unveils-next-genflagship-core-cortex-x3/.

[50] OP-TEE. libutils: add mte support in malloc() and friends. https://github.com/OP-TEE/optee_os/commit/ 08a5c4f9ae421384e52b87107283181e3fddf056.

[51] A. Partap and D. Boneh. Memory tagging: A memory efficient design, 2022.

[52] A. O. S. Project. Control flow integrity, 2022. https://source.android. com/docs/security/test/cfi.

[53] T. C. Projects. Site isolation. https://www.chromium.org/Home/ chromium-security/site-isolation/.

[54] J. Ravichandran, W. T. Na, J. Lang, and M. Yan. Pacman: attacking arm pointer authentication with speculative execution. In Proceedings of the 49th ACM/IEEE International Symposium on Computer Architecture (ISCA), New York, USA, June 2022.

[55] N. L. Rocco. Arm-kerne 2022: Cortex-a715 und cortex-a510 refresh: Effizienz im fokus. https://www.computerbase.de/2022-06/arm-cortexx3-a715-a510-refresh/3/.

[56] saelo. V8 sandbox. https://docs.google.com/document/d/ 1FM4fQmIhEqPG8uGp5o9A-mnPB5BOeScZYpkHjo0KKA8/edit.

[57] T. Schlüter, A. Choudhari, L. Hetterich, L. Trampert, H. Nemati, A. Ibrahim, M. Schwarz, C. Rossow, and N. O. Tippenhauer. Fetchbench: Systematic identification and characterization of proprietary prefetchers. In Proceedings of the 30th ACM Conference on Computer and Communications Security (CCS), Copenhagen, Denmark, Nov. 2022.

[58] M. Schwarz, C. Maurice, D. Gruss, and S. Mangard. Fantastic timers and where to find them: High-resolution microarchitectural attacks in javascript. In Financial Cryptography and Data Security: 21st International Conference, FC 2017, Sliema, Malta, April 3-7, 2017, Revised Selected Papers 21, pages 247–267. Springer, 2017.

[59] Y. Shin, H. C. Kim, D. Kwon, J. H. Jeong, and J. Hur. Unveiling hardware-based data prefetcher, a hidden source of information leakage. In Proceedings of the 25th ACM Conference on Computer and Communications Security (CCS), Tronto, Canada, Oct. 2018.

[60] C. Song, B. Lee, K. Lu, W. Harris, T. Kim, and W. Lee. Enforcing kernel security invariants with data flow integrity. In Proceedings of the 2016 Annual Network and Distributed System Security Symposium (NDSS), San Diego, CA, Feb. 2016.

[61] S. S. Stone, K. M. Woley, and M. I. Frank. Address-indexed memory disambiguation and store-to-load forwarding. In Proceedings of the 38th Annual IEEE/ACM International Symposium on Microarchitecture (MICRO), Barcelona, Spain, Dec. 2005.

[62] C. Tice, T. Roeder, P. Collingbourne, S. Checkoway, Ú. Erlingsson, L. Lozano, and G. Pike. Enforcing forward-edge control-flow integrity in {GCC} & {LLVM}. In Proceedings of the 23rd USENIX Security Symposium (Security), San Diego, CA, Aug. 2014.

[63] Trustonic. Armv9-a: How our kinibi 600 trusted os utilises mte and ff-a features to create state-of-the-art tees. https://www.trustonic.com/technical-articles/armv9-a-how-ourkinibi-600-trusted-os-utilises-mte-and-ff-a-features-to-create-stateof-the-art-tees/.

[64] V8. Pointer compression in v8, . https://v8.dev/blog/pointercompression.

[65] V8. v8/include/v8-internal.h, . https://github.com/v8/v8/blob/ 7161638e5ead74bf84a52d27e69ebda26fbd2416/include/v8- internal.h#L235C11-L235C11.

[66] J. Van Bulck, M. Minkin, O. Weisse, D. Genkin, B. Kasikci, F. Piessens, M. Silberstein, T. F. Wenisch, Y. Yarom, and R. Strackx. Foreshadow: Extracting the keys to the intel {SGX} kingdom with transient {Outof-Order} execution. In Proceedings of the 27th USENIX Security Symposium (Security), Baltimore, MD, Aug. 2018.

[67] J. Van Bulck, D. Moghimi, M. Schwarz, M. Lippi, M. Minkin, D. Genkin, Y. Yarom, B. Sunar, D. Gruss, and F. Piessens. Lvi: Hijacking transient execution through microarchitectural load value injection. In Proceedings of the 41st IEEE Symposium on Security and Privacy (Oakland), Virtual, USA, May 2020.

[68] S. Van Schaik, A. Milburn, S. Österlund, P. Frigo, G. Maisuradze, K. Razavi, H. Bos, and C. Giuffrida. Ridl: Rogue in-flight data load. In Proceedings of the 40th IEEE Symposium on Security and Privacy (Oakland), San Jose, CA, May 2019.

[69] J. R. S. Vicarte, M. Flanders, R. Paccagnella, G. Garrett-Grossman, A. Morrison, C. W. Fletcher, and D. Kohlbrenner. Augury: Using data memory-dependent prefetchers to leak data at rest. In Proceedings of the 42rd IEEE Symposium on Security and Privacy (Oakland), San Francisco, CA, May 2022.

[70] P. Vila, B. Köpf, and J. F. Morales. Theory and practice of finding eviction sets. In Proceedings of the 40th IEEE Symposium on Security and Privacy (Oakland), San Jose, CA, May 2019.

[71] J. Wikner and K. Razavi. {RETBLEED}: Arbitrary speculative code execution with return instructions. In Proceedings of the 3125 USENIX Security Symposium (Security), Boston, MA, Aug. 2022.

[72] H. Xiao and S. Ainsworth. Hacky racers: Exploiting instruction-level parallelism to generate stealthy fine-grained timers. In Proceedings of the 28th ACM International Conference on Architectural Support for Programming Languages and Operating Systems (ASPLOS), Vancouver, Canada, Apr. 2023.

\

:::info Authors:

  1. Juhee Kim
  2. Jinbum Park
  3. Sihyeon Roh
  4. Jaeyoung Chung
  5. Youngjoo Lee
  6. Taesoo Kim
  7. Byoungyoung Lee

:::

:::info This paper is available on arxiv under CC 4.0 license.

:::

\

Market Opportunity
RealLink Logo
RealLink Price(REAL)
$0.07503
$0.07503$0.07503
+1.24%
USD
RealLink (REAL) Live Price Chart
Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact service@support.mexc.com for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

You May Also Like

CME Group to launch options on XRP and SOL futures

CME Group to launch options on XRP and SOL futures

The post CME Group to launch options on XRP and SOL futures appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. CME Group will offer options based on the derivative markets on Solana (SOL) and XRP. The new markets will open on October 13, after regulatory approval.  CME Group will expand its crypto products with options on the futures markets of Solana (SOL) and XRP. The futures market will start on October 13, after regulatory review and approval.  The options will allow the trading of MicroSol, XRP, and MicroXRP futures, with expiry dates available every business day, monthly, and quarterly. The new products will be added to the existing BTC and ETH options markets. ‘The launch of these options contracts builds on the significant growth and increasing liquidity we have seen across our suite of Solana and XRP futures,’ said Giovanni Vicioso, CME Group Global Head of Cryptocurrency Products. The options contracts will have two main sizes, tracking the futures contracts. The new market will be suitable for sophisticated institutional traders, as well as active individual traders. The addition of options markets singles out XRP and SOL as liquid enough to offer the potential to bet on a market direction.  The options on futures arrive a few months after the launch of SOL futures. Both SOL and XRP had peak volumes in August, though XRP activity has slowed down in September. XRP and SOL options to tap both institutions and active traders Crypto options are one of the indicators of market attitudes, with XRP and SOL receiving a new way to gauge sentiment. The contracts will be supported by the Cumberland team.  ‘As one of the biggest liquidity providers in the ecosystem, the Cumberland team is excited to support CME Group’s continued expansion of crypto offerings,’ said Roman Makarov, Head of Cumberland Options Trading at DRW. ‘The launch of options on Solana and XRP futures is the latest example of the…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 00:56
The Rise of the Heli-Trek: How Fly-Out Adventures Are Redefining Everest Travel

The Rise of the Heli-Trek: How Fly-Out Adventures Are Redefining Everest Travel

Planning to embark on a Gokyo Ri Trek, Mera Peak, or Island Peak? Keep reading to know how the “Fly-Out” model is evolving Khumbu travel.  For a very long time,
Share
Techbullion2025/12/25 12:26
UK crypto holders brace for FCA’s expanded regulatory reach

UK crypto holders brace for FCA’s expanded regulatory reach

The post UK crypto holders brace for FCA’s expanded regulatory reach appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. British crypto holders may soon face a very different landscape as the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) moves to expand its regulatory reach in the industry. A new consultation paper outlines how the watchdog intends to apply its rulebook to crypto firms, shaping everything from asset safeguarding to trading platform operation. According to the financial regulator, these proposals would translate into clearer protections for retail investors and stricter oversight of crypto firms. UK FCA plans Until now, UK crypto users mostly encountered the FCA through rules on promotions and anti-money laundering checks. The consultation paper goes much further. It proposes direct oversight of stablecoin issuers, custodians, and crypto-asset trading platforms (CATPs). For investors, that means the wallets, exchanges, and coins they rely on could soon be subject to the same governance and resilience standards as traditional financial institutions. The regulator has also clarified that firms need official authorization before serving customers. This condition should, in theory, reduce the risk of sudden platform failures or unclear accountability. David Geale, the FCA’s executive director of payments and digital finance, said the proposals are designed to strike a balance between innovation and protection. He explained: “We want to develop a sustainable and competitive crypto sector – balancing innovation, market integrity and trust.” Geale noted that while the rules will not eliminate investment risks, they will create consistent standards, helping consumers understand what to expect from registered firms. Why does this matter for crypto holders? The UK regulatory framework shift would provide safer custody of assets, better disclosure of risks, and clearer recourse if something goes wrong. However, the regulator was also frank in its submission, arguing that no rulebook can eliminate the volatility or inherent risks of holding digital assets. Instead, the focus is on ensuring that when consumers choose to invest, they do…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/17 23:52