Syverson, Paul Cervesato, Iliano The Logic of Authentication Protocols The rationale of authentication has been a topic of study for about a decade and a half. First attempts at formal analysis of authentication protocols were not using logics per se, but were certainly logical. Millen’s Interrogator [Mil84,MCF87] was a Prolog based tool specifically designed for authentication protocol analysis that functioned essentially as a special purpose model checker. Kemmerer used the general purpose formal specification language Ina Jo and an accompanying symbolic execution tool Inatest to specify and analyze protocols [Kem87]. We will focus on logics of authentication, beginning with BAN [BAN89a]. However, we will not only be discussing logics per se. We will also be looking at the ‘rhyme and reason’ of authentication, the attempts to formalize and define notions of authentication and to apply these. Thus, we will also be considering the logic of authentication in a broader sense. We will not discuss (except incidentally) other formal methods that have been applied to authentication. In particular, we will not be describing process algebras, automata, automated tools such as theorem provers or model checkers. Some of these other approaches are discussed elsewhere in this volume. The remainder of this section will provide background on authentication protocols and introduce a running example. computer sciences 2003-01-01
    https://kilthub.cmu.edu/articles/journal_contribution/The_Logic_of_Authentication_Protocols/6610673
10.1184/R1/6610673.v1