A Deeper Look into RowHammer`s Sensitivities: Experimental Analysis of Real DRAM Chips and Implications on Future Attacks and Defenses
Lois Orosa, Abdullah Giray Ya\u{g}l{\i}k\c{c}{\i}, Haocong Luo, and Ataberk Olgun, Jisung Park, Hasan Hassan, Minesh Patel and, Jeremie S. Kim, Onur Mutlu

TL;DR
This paper provides an in-depth experimental analysis of modern DRAM chips' vulnerabilities to RowHammer, revealing how temperature, active time, and physical location influence bit flip susceptibility, with implications for future attacks and defenses.
Contribution
It offers novel empirical insights into how specific properties affect RowHammer vulnerability in modern DRAM, aiding in developing more effective attacks and defenses.
Findings
Vulnerable DRAM cells exhibit errors within specific temperature ranges.
Longer aggressor row active time increases vulnerability by 36%.
Certain physical regions are twice as susceptible to bit flips.
Abstract
RowHammer is a circuit-level DRAM vulnerability where repeatedly accessing (i.e., hammering) a DRAM row can cause bit flips in physically nearby rows. The RowHammer vulnerability worsens as DRAM cell size and cell-to-cell spacing shrink. Recent studies demonstrate that modern DRAM chips, including chips previously marketed as RowHammer-safe, are even more vulnerable to RowHammer than older chips such that the required hammer count to cause a bit flip has reduced by more than 10X in the last decade. Therefore, it is essential to develop a better understanding and in-depth insights into the RowHammer vulnerability of modern DRAM chips to more effectively secure current and future systems. Our goal in this paper is to provide insights into fundamental properties of the RowHammer vulnerability that are not yet rigorously studied by prior works, but can potentially be ) exploited to…
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