Automated Verification of Equivalence Properties of Cryptographic Protocols

被引:30
作者
Chadha, Rohit [1 ]
Cheval, Vincent [2 ,5 ]
Ciobaca, Stefan [3 ]
Kremer, Steve [4 ,5 ]
机构
[1] Univ Missouri, Dept Comp Sci, 201 Engn Bldg West, Columbia, MO 65203 USA
[2] Univ Kent, Canterbury CT2 7NZ, Kent, England
[3] Alexandru Ioan Cuza Univ, Fac Comp Sci, 16 Gen Berthelot St, Iasi 700483, Romania
[4] Inria Nancy Grand Est, Villers Les Nancy, France
[5] LORIA, Campus Sci,BP 239, F-54506 Vandoeuvre Les Nancy, France
基金
美国国家科学基金会; 欧洲研究理事会;
关键词
Security; Verification; SYMBOLIC BISIMULATION; DECIDING KNOWLEDGE; SECURITY PROTOCOLS; CALCULUS; PRIVACY; TOOL;
D O I
10.1145/2926715
中图分类号
TP301 [理论、方法];
学科分类号
081202 ;
摘要
Indistinguishability properties are essential in formal verification of cryptographic protocols. They are needed to model anonymity properties, strong versions of confidentiality, and resistance against offline guessing attacks. Indistinguishability properties can be conveniently modeled as equivalence properties. We present a novel procedure to verify equivalence properties for a bounded number of sessions of cryptographic protocols. As in the applied pi calculus, our protocol specification language is parametrized by a first-order sorted term signature and an equational theory that allows formalization of algebraic properties of cryptographic primitives. Our procedure is able to verify trace equivalence for determinate cryptographic protocols. On determinate protocols, trace equivalence coincides with observational equivalence, which can therefore be automatically verified for such processes. When protocols are not determinate, our procedure can be used for both under- and over-approximations of trace equivalence, which proved successful on examples. The procedure can handle a large set of cryptographic primitives, namely those whose equational theory is generated by an optimally reducing convergent rewrite system. The procedure is based on a fully abstract modelling of the traces of a bounded number of sessions of the protocols into first-order Horn clauses on which a dedicated resolution procedure is used to decide equivalence properties. We have shown that our procedure terminates for the class of subterm convergent equational theories. Moreover, the procedure has been implemented in a prototype tool Active Knowledge in Security Protocols and has been effectively tested on examples. Some of the examples were outside the scope of existing tools, including checking anonymity of an electronic voting protocol due to Okamoto.
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页数:32
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