Abstract
A process following a security protocol is represented by a formal proof (of a fragment of linear logic based on the multiset rewriting model), modifying the idea by Cervesato-Durgin-Lincoln-Mitchell- Scedrov [4], while the (modified) BAN logic (which was first introduced by Burrows-Abadi-Needham [2]) is used as an evaluation semantics on security-properties for processes. By this method, we can get rid of the so called “idealization” step in the verification procedure of the BAN framework. In particular, we classify BAN-style belief-inferences into two categories; the inferences which only require some syntactic structure of a process observed by a participant on one hand, and the inferences which require a participant’s knowledge on the structure of a protocol and a certain honesty assumption.We call the latter the honesty inferences.We shall show how such honesty inferences are used in the evaluation semantics for the security verification. We also point out that the evaluation inferences on freshness of nonces/keys/messages are classified as in the first category but that some of such inferences lack the information how to evaluate due to the lack of a certain concrete time-constraint setting. We introduce a natural time-constraint setting in our process/protocol descriptions and enrich the expressive power of the freshness evaluation.
This work was partly supported by Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research of MEXT, Center of Excellence of MEXT on Humanity Sciences (Keio University), the Japan- US collaborative research program of JSPS-NSF, Oogata-kenkyuu-jyosei grant (Keio University) and Global Security Center grant (Keio University). The first author was also supported by Fellowship for Japanese Junior Scientists from Japan Society for the Promotion of Science.
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Hasebe, K., Okada, M. (2003). A Logical Verification Method for Security Protocols Based on Linear Logic and BAN Logic. In: Okada, M., Pierce, B.C., Scedrov, A., Tokuda, H., Yonezawa, A. (eds) Software Security — Theories and Systems. ISSS 2002. Lecture Notes in Computer Science, vol 2609. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/3-540-36532-X_24
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/3-540-36532-X_24
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