A Core Calculus for Equational Proofs of Cryptographic Protocols

Joshua Gancher, Kristina Sojakova, Xiong Fan, Elaine Shi, Greg Morrisett

Research output: Contribution to JournalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Many proofs of interactive cryptographic protocols (e.g., as in Universal Composability) operate by proving the protocol at hand to be observationally equivalent to an idealized specification. While pervasive, formal tool support for observational equivalence of cryptographic protocols is still a nascent area of research. Current mechanization efforts tend to either focus on diff-equivalence, which establishes observational equivalence between protocols with identical control structures, or require an explicit witness for the observational equivalence in the form of a bisimulation relation. Our goal is to simplify proofs for cryptographic protocols by introducing a core calculus, IPDL, for cryptographic observational equivalences. Via IPDL, we aim to address a number of theoretical issues for cryptographic proofs in a simple manner, including probabilistic behaviors, distributed message-passing, and resource-bounded adversaries and simulators. We demonstrate IPDL on a number of case studies, including a distributed coin toss protocol, Oblivious Transfer, and the GMW multi-party computation protocol. All proofs of case studies are mechanized via an embedding of IPDL into the Coq proof assistant.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)866-892
JournalProceedings of the ACM on Programming Languages
Volume7
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 9 Jan 2023
Externally publishedYes

Funding

FundersFunder number
Horizon 2020 Framework Programme1801369, 1704788, 957073

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