Execution Models for Choreographies and Cryptoprotocols

Marco Carbone
(IT University of Copenhagen)
Joshua Guttman
(Worcester Polytechnic Institute)

A choreography describes a transaction in which several principals interact. Since choreographies frequently describe business processes affecting substantial assets, we need a security infrastructure in order to implement them safely. As part of a line of work devoted to generating cryptoprotocols from choreographies, we focus here on the execution models suited to the two levels.

We give a strand-style semantics for choreographies, and propose a special execution model in which choreography-level messages are faithfully delivered exactly once. We adapt this model to handle multiparty protocols in which some participants may be compromised.

At level of cryptoprotocols, we use the standard Dolev-Yao execution model, with one alteration. Since many implementations use a "nonce cache" to discard multiply delivered messages, we provide a semantics for at-most-once delivery.

In Alastair R. Beresford and Simon Gay: Proceedings Second International Workshop on Programming Language Approaches to Concurrency and Communication-cEntric Software (PLACES 2009), York, UK, 22nd March 2009, Electronic Proceedings in Theoretical Computer Science 17, pp. 31–41.
Published: 6th February 2010.

ArXived at: https://dx.doi.org/10.4204/EPTCS.17.3 bibtex PDF

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