Securing UART communication interface in embedded IoT devices
By Harigovind A and Rakshith M B from Infineon Technologies (August 6, 2021)
With the increasing number of high-profile data and privacy breaches in the Internet of Things (IoT) systems, businesses and consumers have a greater awareness of the need for security when buying connected products. Providing best-in-class products or services is no longer enough. Devices that fail to provide adequate security will fail to be able to compete with those that provide end-to-end security.
Many protocols implement security within the standard and are a built-in part of any controller. Embedded devices that connect via universal asynchronous receiver-transmitter (UART), however, are not protected. UART is one of the simplest digital communication interfaces between devices. It’s a no ACK communication protocol that can be read by any device if the baud rate is known.
To prevent data from being read or injected into the system, the communication channel needs to be secured by the systems sending and receiving the data. Thus, even if an intruder gains access to the communication channel with the correct baud rate, the channel will be protected.
To read the full article, click here
Related Semiconductor IP
- Root of Trust (RoT)
- Fixed Point Doppler Channel IP core
- Multi-protocol wireless plaform integrating Bluetooth Dual Mode, IEEE 802.15.4 (for Thread, Zigbee and Matter)
- Polyphase Video Scaler
- Compact, low-power, 8bit ADC on GF 22nm FDX
Related White Papers
- Securing IoT Devices With ARM TrustZone
- Securing IoT Devices can be Never-Ending
- Managing energy consumption in wireless IoT devices
- MIPI in next generation of AI IoT devices at the edge
Latest White Papers
- Reimagining AI Infrastructure: The Power of Converged Back-end Networks
- 40G UCIe IP Advantages for AI Applications
- Recent progress in spin-orbit torque magnetic random-access memory
- What is JESD204C? A quick glance at the standard
- Open-Source Design of Heterogeneous SoCs for AI Acceleration: the PULP Platform Experience