Automated Attack Synthesis by Extracting Finite State Machines from Protocol Specification Documents
February 18, 2022 ยท Declared Dead ยท ๐ IEEE Symposium on Security and Privacy
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Authors
Maria Leonor Pacheco, Max von Hippel, Ben Weintraub, Dan Goldwasser, Cristina Nita-Rotaru
arXiv ID
2202.09470
Category
cs.CR: Cryptography & Security
Cross-listed
cs.CL,
cs.FL,
cs.LG
Citations
52
Venue
IEEE Symposium on Security and Privacy
Last Checked
3 months ago
Abstract
Automated attack discovery techniques, such as attacker synthesis or model-based fuzzing, provide powerful ways to ensure network protocols operate correctly and securely. Such techniques, in general, require a formal representation of the protocol, often in the form of a finite state machine (FSM). Unfortunately, many protocols are only described in English prose, and implementing even a simple network protocol as an FSM is time-consuming and prone to subtle logical errors. Automatically extracting protocol FSMs from documentation can significantly contribute to increased use of these techniques and result in more robust and secure protocol implementations. In this work we focus on attacker synthesis as a representative technique for protocol security, and on RFCs as a representative format for protocol prose description. Unlike other works that rely on rule-based approaches or use off-the-shelf NLP tools directly, we suggest a data-driven approach for extracting FSMs from RFC documents. Specifically, we use a hybrid approach consisting of three key steps: (1) large-scale word-representation learning for technical language, (2) focused zero-shot learning for mapping protocol text to a protocol-independent information language, and (3) rule-based mapping from protocol-independent information to a specific protocol FSM. We show the generalizability of our FSM extraction by using the RFCs for six different protocols: BGPv4, DCCP, LTP, PPTP, SCTP and TCP. We demonstrate how automated extraction of an FSM from an RFC can be applied to the synthesis of attacks, with TCP and DCCP as case-studies. Our approach shows that it is possible to automate attacker synthesis against protocols by using textual specifications such as RFCs.
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