Security protocol notation

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Security (engineering) protocol notation is a way of expressing a protocol of correspondence between entities of a dynamic system, such as a computer network. In the context of a formal model, it allows reasoning about the properties of such a system.

The standard notation consists of a set of individuals (traditionally named Alice, Bob, Charlie, and so on) who wish to communicate. They may have access to a server S, shared keys K, timestamps T, and can generate nonces N for authentication purposes.

A simple example might be the following:

A\rightarrow B:\{X_1\}_{K_{AB}}

This states that Alice intends a message for Bob consisting of a plain text X1 encrypted under shared key KAB.

Another example might be the following:

B\rightarrow A:\{N_B\}_{PK(A)}

This states that Bob intends a message for Alice consisting of a Nonce encrypted using public key of Alice.

A key with two subscripts is a symmetric key shared by the two corresponding individuals. A key with one subscript is the public key of the corresponding individual. A private key is represented as the inverse of the public key.

The notation specifies only the operation and not its semantics — for instance, public key encryption and signature are represented identically.

We can express more complicated protocols in such a fashion. See Kerberos as an example.

Several models exist to reason about security protocols in this way, one of which is BAN logic.

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