Patents by Inventor Rodrick Cottrell

Rodrick Cottrell has filed for patents to protect the following inventions. This listing includes patent applications that are pending as well as patents that have already been granted by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).

  • Patent number: 9810736
    Abstract: A trusted boot device secures JTAG scan chains of integrated circuit components on a circuit card assembly without necessarily modifying the integrated circuit components. Component JTAG port I/O scan chain signal pins are independently routed to FPGA fabric on the trusted boot device. The trusted boot device monitors the JTAG paths and triggers a security event if unauthorized activity is detected on a JTAG path. JTAG paths on the secure trusted boot device are latch disabled by default and upon detection of a security event. JTAG paths are only enabled for a predefined length of time. To prevent JTAG access when protected data is exposed, a watchdog timer latch disables the JTAG paths when the predefined time has expired and may trigger a security event if activity is detected after the time has expired. A power cycle is then used to re-enable authenticated JTAG enable requests.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 17, 2015
    Date of Patent: November 7, 2017
    Assignee: Raytheon Company
    Inventors: Rodrick Cottrell, Dee C. Neuenschwander
  • Publication number: 20170176530
    Abstract: A trusted boot device secures JTAG scan chains of integrated circuit components on a circuit card assembly without necessarily modifying the integrated circuit components. Component JTAG port I/O scan chain signal pins are independently routed to FPGA fabric on the trusted boot device. The trusted boot device monitors the JTAG paths and triggers a security event if unauthorized activity is detected on a JTAG path. JTAG paths on the secure trusted boot device are latch disabled by default and upon detection of a security event. JTAG paths are only enabled for a predefined length of time. To prevent JTAG access when protected data is exposed, a watchdog timer latch disables the JTAG paths when the predefined time has expired and may trigger a security event if activity is detected after the time has expired. A power cycle is then used to re-enable authenticated JTAG enable requests.
    Type: Application
    Filed: December 17, 2015
    Publication date: June 22, 2017
    Inventors: Rodrick Cottrell, Dee C. Neuenschwander