Choreographies with Secure Boxes and Compromised Principals

We equip choreography-level session descriptions with a simple abstraction of a security infrastructure. Message components may be enclosed within (possibly nested) ''boxes'' annotated with the intended source and destination of those components. The boxes are to be implemented w...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Joshua Guttman, Marco Carbone
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Open Publishing Association 2009-12-01
Series:Electronic Proceedings in Theoretical Computer Science
Online Access:http://arxiv.org/pdf/0911.5444v1
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spelling doaj-e670283903b24262b98cdd7c7e842dee2020-11-24T21:15:38ZengOpen Publishing AssociationElectronic Proceedings in Theoretical Computer Science2075-21802009-12-0112Proc. ICE 200911510.4204/EPTCS.12.1Choreographies with Secure Boxes and Compromised PrincipalsJoshua GuttmanMarco CarboneWe equip choreography-level session descriptions with a simple abstraction of a security infrastructure. Message components may be enclosed within (possibly nested) ''boxes'' annotated with the intended source and destination of those components. The boxes are to be implemented with cryptography. Strand spaces provide a semantics for these choreographies, in which some roles may be played by compromised principals. A skeleton is a partially ordered structure containing local behaviors (strands) executed by regular (non-compromised) principals. A skeleton is realized if it contains enough regular strands so that it could actually occur, in combination with any possible activity of compromised principals. It is delivery guaranteed (DG) realized if, in addition, every message transmitted to a regular participant is also delivered. We define a novel transition system on skeletons, in which the steps add regular strands. These steps solve tests, i.e. parts of the skeleton that could not occur without additional regular behavior. We prove three main results about the transition system. First, each minimal DG realized skeleton is reachable, using the transition system, from any skeleton it embeds. Second, if no step is possible from a skeleton A, then A is DG realized. Finally, if a DG realized B is accessible from A, then B is minimal. Thus, the transition system provides a systematic way to construct the possible behaviors of the choreography, in the presence of compromised principals. http://arxiv.org/pdf/0911.5444v1
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Joshua Guttman
Marco Carbone
spellingShingle Joshua Guttman
Marco Carbone
Choreographies with Secure Boxes and Compromised Principals
Electronic Proceedings in Theoretical Computer Science
author_facet Joshua Guttman
Marco Carbone
author_sort Joshua Guttman
title Choreographies with Secure Boxes and Compromised Principals
title_short Choreographies with Secure Boxes and Compromised Principals
title_full Choreographies with Secure Boxes and Compromised Principals
title_fullStr Choreographies with Secure Boxes and Compromised Principals
title_full_unstemmed Choreographies with Secure Boxes and Compromised Principals
title_sort choreographies with secure boxes and compromised principals
publisher Open Publishing Association
series Electronic Proceedings in Theoretical Computer Science
issn 2075-2180
publishDate 2009-12-01
description We equip choreography-level session descriptions with a simple abstraction of a security infrastructure. Message components may be enclosed within (possibly nested) ''boxes'' annotated with the intended source and destination of those components. The boxes are to be implemented with cryptography. Strand spaces provide a semantics for these choreographies, in which some roles may be played by compromised principals. A skeleton is a partially ordered structure containing local behaviors (strands) executed by regular (non-compromised) principals. A skeleton is realized if it contains enough regular strands so that it could actually occur, in combination with any possible activity of compromised principals. It is delivery guaranteed (DG) realized if, in addition, every message transmitted to a regular participant is also delivered. We define a novel transition system on skeletons, in which the steps add regular strands. These steps solve tests, i.e. parts of the skeleton that could not occur without additional regular behavior. We prove three main results about the transition system. First, each minimal DG realized skeleton is reachable, using the transition system, from any skeleton it embeds. Second, if no step is possible from a skeleton A, then A is DG realized. Finally, if a DG realized B is accessible from A, then B is minimal. Thus, the transition system provides a systematic way to construct the possible behaviors of the choreography, in the presence of compromised principals.
url http://arxiv.org/pdf/0911.5444v1
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