SAT-Equiv: an efficient tool for equivalence properties
Véronique Cortier, Stéphanie Delaune, and Antoine Dallon. SAT-Equiv: an efficient tool for equivalence properties. In Proceedings of the 30th IEEE Computer Security Foundations Symposium (CSF'17), IEEE Computer Society Press, August 2017.
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Abstract
Automatic tools based on symbolic models have been successful in analyzing security protocols. Such tools are particularly adapted for trace properties (e.g. secrecy or authentication), while they often fail to analyse equivalence properties.
Equivalence properties can express a variety of security properties, including in particular privacy properties (vote privacy, anonymity, untraceability). Several decision procedures have already been proposed but the resulting tools are rather inefficient.
In this paper, we propose a novel algorithm, based on graph planning and SAT-solving, which significantly improves the efficiency of the analysis of equivalence properties. The resulting implementation, SAT-Equiv, can analyze several sessions where most tools have to stop after one or two sessions.
BibTeX
@InProceedings{CSF2017-SATequiv, author = {V\'eronique Cortier and St\'ephanie Delaune and Antoine Dallon}, title = {SAT-Equiv: an efficient tool for equivalence properties}, booktitle = {{P}roceedings of the 30th {IEEE} {C}omputer {S}ecurity {F}oundations {S}ymposium ({CSF}'17)}, year = 2017, month = {August}, publisher = {{IEEE} Computer Society Press}, abstract = {Automatic tools based on symbolic models have been successful in analyzing security protocols. Such tools are particularly adapted for trace properties (e.g. secrecy or authentication), while they often fail to analyse equivalence properties. \par Equivalence properties can express a variety of security properties, including in particular privacy properties (vote privacy, anonymity, untraceability). Several decision procedures have already been proposed but the resulting tools are rather inefficient. \par In this paper, we propose a novel algorithm, based on graph planning and SAT-solving, which significantly improves the efficiency of the analysis of equivalence properties. The resulting implementation, SAT-Equiv, can analyze several sessions where most tools have to stop after one or two sessions. }, ={https://members.loria.fr/VCortier/files/Papers/CSF2017-SATequiv.pdf}, }