English

HyperATL*: A Logic for Hyperproperties in Multi-Agent Systems

Logic in Computer Science 2024-02-14 v4

Abstract

Hyperproperties are system properties that relate multiple computation paths in a system and are commonly used to, e.g., define information-flow policies. In this paper, we study a novel class of hyperproperties that allow reasoning about strategic abilities in multi-agent systems. We introduce HyperATL*, an extension of computation tree logic with path variables and strategy quantifiers. Our logic supports quantification over paths in a system - as is possible in hyperlogics such as HyperCTL* - but resolves the paths based on the strategic choices of a coalition of agents. This allows us to capture many previously studied (strategic) security notions in a unifying hyperlogic. Moreover, we show that HyperATL* is particularly useful for specifying asynchronous hyperproperties, i.e., hyperproperties where the execution speed on the different computation paths depends on the choices of a scheduler. We show that finite-state model checking of HyperATL* is decidable and present a model checking algorithm based on alternating automata. We establish that our algorithm is asymptotically optimal by proving matching lower bounds. We have implemented a prototype model checker for a fragment of HyperATL* that can check various security properties in small finite-state systems.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2203.07283,
  title  = {HyperATL*: A Logic for Hyperproperties in Multi-Agent Systems},
  author = {Raven Beutner and Bernd Finkbeiner},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2203.07283},
  year   = {2024}
}
R2 v1 2026-06-24T10:12:44.324Z