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CacheTrap: Injecting Trojans in LLMs without Leaving any Traces in Inputs or Weights

Mohaiminul Al Nahian (SUNY Binghamton) Abeer Matar A. Almalky (SUNY Binghamton) Gamana Aragonda (New Jersey Institute of Technology) Ranyang Zhou (New Jersey Institute of Technology) Sabbir Ahmed (SUNY Binghamton) Dmitry Ponomarev (SUNY Binghamton) Li Yang (UNC Charlotte) Shaahin Angizi (New Jersey Institute of Technology) Adnan Siraj Rakin (SUNY Binghamton)
Published
November 27, 2025
Updated
November 27, 2025

Abstract

Adversarial weight perturbation has emerged as a concerning threat to LLMs that either use training privileges or system-level access to inject adversarial corruption in model weights. With the emergence of innovative defensive solutions that place system- and algorithm-level checks and corrections in the input and weight spaces, these perturbations are increasingly susceptible to defenses. This work develops a novel perspective on Trojan attacks that generates an attacker-designed model output while leaving no attack traces on the inputs or weights. Such an attack space can be unlocked through corruption of the key-value (KV) cache. In this paper, we introduce CacheTrap, a novel Trojan attack that corrupts the value vectors stored in the KV cache. These vectors capture the dynamic activations for specific token positions and therefore constitute a natural surface for transient, inference-time trigger insertion. The transient nature of these KV values and their dependence on victim input imply additional constraints on our attack, such as a lack of knowledge of the victim's data or domain application, and, consequently, a lack of gradient information. The objective of the proposed CacheTrap is to develop a vulnerable KV bit-searching algorithm so that, once the attack employs the identified bit-flip as a trigger, the model generates targeted behavior, e.g., classifying inputs towards the target class. Moreover, CacheTrap is a data- and gradient-free attack which also has no impact on the model's utility. Our evaluation demonstrates that the proposed attack enables the first successful Trojan attack on LLMs with a single bit flip in the KV cache. In addition, the data-independent nature of the attack ensures that once the attacker identifies the vulnerable bit index, the location remains constant and can be transferred to a wide range of victim tasks/datasets/queries with no overhead.

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