Deductive verification of alternating systems

  • Authors:
  • Matteo Slanina;Henny B. Sipma;Zohar Manna

  • Affiliations:
  • Google Inc., 1600 Amphitheatre Pkwy, 94043, Mountain View, CA, USA;Stanford University, Computer Science Department, 353 Serra Mall, 94305-9045, Stanford, CA, USA;Stanford University, Computer Science Department, 353 Serra Mall, 94305-9045, Stanford, CA, USA

  • Venue:
  • Formal Aspects of Computing
  • Year:
  • 2008

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Abstract

Alternating systems are models of computer programs whose behavior is governed by the actions of multiple agents with, potentially, different goals. Examples include control systems, resource schedulers, security protocols, auctions and election mechanisms. Proving properties about such systems has emerged as an important new area of study in formal verification, with the development of logical frameworks such as the alternating temporal logic ATL*. Techniques for model checking ATL* over finite-state systems have been well studied, but many important systems are infinite-state and thus their verification requires, either explicitly or implicitly, some form of deductive reasoning. This paper presents a theoretical framework for the analysis of alternating infinite-state systems. It describes models of computation, of various degrees of generality, and alternating-time logics such as ATL* and its variations. It then develops a proof system that allows to prove arbitrary ATL* properties over these infinite-state models. The proof system is shown to be complete relative to validities in the weakest possible assertion language. The paper then derives auxiliary proof rules and verification diagrams techniques and applies them to security protocols, deriving a new formal proof of fairness of a multi-party contract signing protocol where the model of the protocol and of the properties contains both game-theoretic and infinite-state (parameterized) aspects.