ArXiv TLDR

RowHammer Vulnerability Counter (RVC): Redefining RowHammer Detection with Victim-Centric Tracking

🐦 Tweet
2604.24287

Lavi Jain, Venkata Kalyan Tavva

cs.CRcs.AR

TLDR

RVC is a novel RowHammer mitigation that tracks actual row vulnerability instead of activation counts, drastically reducing refreshes and improving efficiency.

Key contributions

  • Proposes Rowhammer Vulnerability Counter (RVC), a novel victim-centric detection framework.
  • Shifts focus from activation counts to actual row vulnerability, preventing bit flips efficiently.
  • Achieves 95-99.99% reduction in mitigation-induced refreshes compared to Graphene.
  • Improves energy efficiency and reduces LLC latency by up to 76.91% without additional overhead.

Why it matters

RowHammer is a critical threat, but current mitigations are inefficient. RVC offers a novel, victim-centric approach to accurately detect vulnerable rows, drastically reducing refreshes, improving energy efficiency and system latency for modern DRAM.

Original Abstract

The Rowhammer vulnerability poses an increasing challenge with newer generations of DRAM and aggressive technology scaling. Existing mitigation techniques, such as Graphene, Twice, and Hydra, primarily rely on tracking activation counts for each row and issuing refreshes when a row reaches a predefined tracking threshold. However, these methods have inherent limitations, including inefficiencies in identifying rows genuinely at risk of bit flips. In this paper, we propose a novel framework called Rowhammer Vulnerability Count (RVC), which shifts the focus from activation count tracking to evaluating a row's actual vulnerability to bit flips. By selectively issuing refreshes only to rows on the verge of experiencing bit flips, RVC drastically reduces unnecessary refresh operations. We also demonstrate that prior works have incorrectly set tracking thresholds, leading to security flaws. Our evaluation shows that RVC achieves 95 - 99.99% improvement in mitigation induced refreshes when compared to Graphene, with no additional space overhead. Furthermore, RVC improves energy efficiency and reduces average LLC latency by up to 76.91%, making it a highly efficient and scalable solution for addressing Rowhammer in modern DRAM systems. These findings establish RVC as a superior approach for preventing Rowhammer, outperforming existing methods in both accuracy and efficiency.

📬 Weekly AI Paper Digest

Get the top 10 AI/ML arXiv papers from the week — summarized, scored, and delivered to your inbox every Monday.