English

Opacity Enforcing Supervisory Control using Non-deterministic Supervisors

Systems and Control 2021-11-23 v2 Systems and Control

Abstract

In this paper, we investigate the enforcement of opacity via supervisory control in the context of discrete-event systems. A system is said to be opaque if the intruder, which is modeled as a passive observer, can never infer confidently that the system is at a secret state. The design objective is to synthesize a supervisor such that the closed-loop system is opaque even when the control policy is publicly known. In this paper, we propose a new approach for enforcing opacity using non-deterministic supervisors. A non-deterministic supervisor is a decision mechanism that provides a set of control decisions at each instant, and randomly picks a specific control decision from the decision set to actually control the plant. Compared with the standard deterministic control mechanism, such a non-deterministic control mechanism can enhance the plausible deniability of the controlled system as the online control decision is a random realization and cannot be implicitly inferred from the control policy. We provide a sound and complete algorithm for synthesizing a non-deterministic opacity-enforcing supervisor. Furthermore, we show that non-deterministic supervisors are strictly more powerful than deterministic supervisors in the sense that there may exist a non-deterministic opacity-enforcing supervisor even when deterministic supervisors cannot enforce opacity.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2010.10149,
  title  = {Opacity Enforcing Supervisory Control using Non-deterministic Supervisors},
  author = {Yifan Xie and Xiang Yin and Shaoyuan Li},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2010.10149},
  year   = {2021}
}

Comments

16 Pages. This paper has been accepted by IEEE transactions on automatic control

R2 v1 2026-06-23T19:28:55.710Z