82.6SYApr 5
Certificates Synthesis for A Class of Observational Properties in Stochastic Systems: A Unified ApproachBohan Cui, Jianing Zhao, Yu Chen et al.
In this paper, we investigate the probabilistic formal verification of stochastic dynamical systems over continuous state spaces. Motivated by problems in state estimation and information-flow security, we introduce the notion of observational properties, which characterize the inferences an external observer can draw from system outputs. These properties are formulated as probabilistic hyperproperties based on HyperLTL over finite traces, yielding a unified framework that subsumes several existing notions studied separately in the literature. We reduce the verification problem to reachability analysis over an augmented structure that integrates the system dynamics with an automaton representation of the specification. Building on this construction, we develop stochastic barrier certificates that provide probabilistic guarantees for property satisfaction while avoiding explicit state-space discretization. The effectiveness of the proposed framework is demonstrated through a case study.
38.4SYApr 5
Opacity Enforcing Supervisory Control with a Priori Unknown SupervisorsBohan Cui, Ziyue Ma, Alessandro Giua et al.
We investigate the enforcement of opacity in discrete-event systems via supervisory control. A system is said to be opaque if a passive intruder can never unambiguously infer whether the system is in a secret state through its observations. In this context, the intruder's knowledge about the supervisor plays a critical role in both problem formulation and solvability. Existing studies typically assume that the policy of the supervisor is either fully unknown to the intruder or fully known a priori, the latter leading to severe technical challenges and unresolved problems under incomparable observations. This paper investigates opacity supervisory control under a new intermediate information setting, which we refer to as the a priori unknown supervisor setting. In this setting, the supervisor's internal realization is not publicly available, but the intruder can partially infer its behavior by eavesdropping on the control decisions issued online during system execution. We formalize the intruder's information-flow under both observation-triggered and decision-triggered decision-issuance mechanisms and define the corresponding notions of opacity. We provide sound and complete algorithms for synthesizing opacity-enforcing supervisors without imposing any restrictions on the observable or controllable event sets. By constructing an information-state structure that embeds the supervisor's estimate of the intruder's belief, the synthesis problem is reduced to a safety game. Finally, we show that, under strictly finer intruder observations, the proposed setting coincides with the standard a priori known supervisor model.