Skills crypto-protocol-diagram
Extracts protocol message flow from source code, RFCs, academic papers, pseudocode, informal prose, ProVerif (.pv), or Tamarin (.spthy) models and generates Mermaid sequenceDiagrams with cryptographic annotations. Use when diagramming a crypto protocol, visualizing a handshake or key exchange flow, extracting message flow from a spec or RFC, diagramming a ProVerif or Tamarin model, or drawing sequence diagrams for TLS, Noise, Signal, X3DH, Double Ratchet, FROST, DH, or ECDH protocols.
git clone https://github.com/trailofbits/skills
T=$(mktemp -d) && git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/trailofbits/skills "$T" && mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills && cp -r "$T/plugins/trailmark/skills/crypto-protocol-diagram" ~/.claude/skills/trailofbits-skills-crypto-protocol-diagram && rm -rf "$T"
plugins/trailmark/skills/crypto-protocol-diagram/SKILL.mdCrypto Protocol Diagram
Produces a Mermaid
sequenceDiagram (written to file) and an ASCII sequence
diagram (printed inline) from either:
- Source code implementing a cryptographic protocol, or
- A specification — RFC, academic paper, pseudocode, informal prose,
ProVerif (
), or Tamarin (.pv
) model..spthy
Tools used: Read, Write, Grep, Glob, Bash, WebFetch (for URL specs).
Unlike the
diagramming-code skill (which visualizes code structure), this skill
extracts protocol semantics: who sends what to whom, what cryptographic
transformations occur at each step, and what protocol phases exist.
For call graphs, class hierarchies, or module dependency maps, use the
diagramming-code skill instead.
When to Use
- User asks to diagram, visualize, or extract a cryptographic protocol
- Input is source code implementing a handshake, key exchange, or multi-party protocol
- Input is an RFC, academic paper, pseudocode, or formal model (ProVerif/Tamarin)
- User names a specific protocol (TLS, Noise, Signal, X3DH, FROST)
When NOT to Use
- User wants a call graph, class hierarchy, or module dependency map — use
diagramming-code - User wants to formally verify a protocol — use
(after generating the diagram)mermaid-to-proverif - Input has no cryptographic protocol semantics (no parties, no message exchange)
Rationalizations to Reject
| Rationalization | Why It's Wrong | Required Action |
|---|---|---|
| "The protocol is simple, I can diagram from memory" | Memory-based diagrams miss steps and invert arrows | Read the source or spec systematically |
| "I'll skip the spec path since code exists" | Code may diverge from the spec — both paths catch different bugs | When both exist, run spec workflow first, then annotate code divergences |
| "Crypto annotations are optional decoration" | Without crypto annotations, the diagram is just a message flow — useless for security review | Annotate every cryptographic operation |
| "The abort path is obvious, no need for alt blocks" | Implicit abort handling hides missing error checks | Show every abort/error path with blocks |
| "I don't need to check the examples first" | The examples define the expected output quality bar | Study the relevant example before working on unfamiliar input |
| "ProVerif/Tamarin models are code, not specs" | Formal models are specifications — they describe intended behavior, not implementation | Use the spec workflow (S1–S5) for and files |
Workflow
Protocol Diagram Progress: - [ ] Step 0: Determine input type (code / spec / both) - [ ] Step 1 (code) or S1–S5 (spec): Extract protocol structure - [ ] Step 6: Generate sequenceDiagram - [ ] Step 7: Verify and deliver
Step 0: Determine Input Type
Before doing anything else, classify the input:
| Signal | Input type |
|---|---|
Source file extensions (, , , , , , ) | Code |
| Function/class definitions, import statements | Code |
RFC-style section headers (, , / keywords) | Spec |
// labels, mathematical notation | Spec |
ProVerif file () with , , / | Spec |
Tamarin file () with , | Spec |
| Plain prose or numbered steps describing a protocol | Spec |
| Both source files and a spec document | Both (annotate divergences with ) |
- Code only → skip to Step 1 below
- Spec only → skip to Spec Workflow (S1–S5) below
- Both → run Spec Workflow first, then use the code-reading steps to verify
the implementation against the spec diagram and annotate any divergences with
⚠️ - Ambiguous → ask the user: "Is this a source code file, a specification document, or both?"
Step 1: Locate Protocol Entry Points
Grep for function names, type names, and comments that reveal the protocol:
# Find handshake, session, round, phase entry points rg -l "handshake|session_init|round[_0-9]|setup|keygen|send_msg|recv_msg" {targetDir} # Find crypto primitives in use rg "sign|verify|encrypt|decrypt|dh|ecdh|kdf|hkdf|hmac|hash|commit|reveal|share" \ {targetDir} --type-add 'src:*.{py,rs,go,ts,js,cpp,c}' -t src -l
Start reading from the highest-level orchestration function — the one that calls into handshake phases or the main protocol loop.
Step 2: Identify Parties and Roles
Extract participant names from:
- Struct/class names:
,Client
,Server
,Initiator
,Responder
,Prover
,Verifier
,Dealer
,PartyCoordinator - Function parameter names that carry state for a role
- Comments declaring the protocol role
- Test fixtures that set up two-party or N-party scenarios
Map these to Mermaid
participant declarations. Use short, readable aliases:
participant I as Initiator participant R as Responder
Step 3: Trace Message Flow
Follow state transitions and network sends/receives. Look for patterns like:
| Pattern | Meaning |
|---|---|
/ | Direct message exchange |
+ | Structured message sent |
| Return value passed to other party's function | Logical message (in-process) |
→ | Round-based MPC step |
Struct fields named , , , | Message contents |
For in-process protocol implementations (where both parties run in the same process), treat function call boundaries as logical message sends when they represent what would be a network boundary in deployment.
Step 4: Annotate Cryptographic Operations
At each protocol step, identify and label:
| Operation | Diagram annotation |
|---|---|
| Key generation | |
| DH / ECDH | |
| KDF / HKDF | |
| Signing | |
| Verification | |
| Encryption | |
| Decryption | |
| Commitment | |
| Hash | |
| Secret sharing | |
| Threshold combine | |
Keep annotations concise — use mathematical shorthand, not code.
Step 5: Identify Protocol Phases
Group message steps into named phases using
rect or Note blocks:
Common phases to detect:
- Setup / Key Generation: party key creation, trusted setup, parameter gen
- Handshake / Init: ephemeral key exchange, nonce exchange, version negotiation
- Authentication: identity proof, certificate exchange, signature verification
- Key Derivation: session key derivation from shared secrets
- Data Transfer / Main Protocol: encrypted application data exchange
- Finalization / Teardown: session close, MAC verification, abort handling
Detect abort/error paths and show them with
alt blocks.
Spec Workflow (S1–S5)
Use this path when the input is a specification document rather than source code. After completing S1–S5, continue with Step 6 (Generate sequenceDiagram) and Step 7 (Verify and deliver) from the code workflow above.
Step S1: Ingest the Spec
Obtain the full spec text:
- File path provided → read with the Read tool
- URL provided → fetch with WebFetch
- Pasted inline → work directly from conversation context
Then identify the spec format and read references/spec-parsing-patterns.md for format-specific extraction guidance:
| Format | Signals |
|---|---|
| RFC | , //, ABNF grammars, section-numbered prose |
| Academic paper / pseudocode | , , , numbered steps, / in math mode |
| Informal prose | Numbered lists, "A sends B ...", plain English descriptions |
ProVerif () | , , , , (replication) |
Tamarin () | , , , , , |
If the spec references a known named protocol (TLS, Noise, Signal, X3DH, Double Ratchet, FROST), also read references/protocol-patterns.md to use its canonical flow as a skeleton and fill in spec-specific details.
Step S2: Extract Parties and Roles
Identify all protocol participants. Look for:
- Named roles in prose or pseudocode:
,Alice
,Bob
,Client
,Server
,Initiator
,Responder
,Prover
,Verifier
,Dealer
,Party_i
,CoordinatorSigner - Section headers: "Parties", "Roles", "Participants", "Setup", "Notation"
- ProVerif: process names at top level (
,let ClientProc(...)
)let ServerProc(...) - Tamarin: rule names and fact arguments (e.g.
—!Pk($A, pk)
is a party)$A
Map each role to a Mermaid
participant declaration. Use short IDs with
descriptive aliases (see naming conventions in
references/mermaid-sequence-syntax.md).
Step S3: Extract Message Flow
Trace what each party sends to whom and in what order. Extraction patterns by format:
RFC / informal prose:
- Arrow notation:
,A → B: msgA -> B - Sentence patterns: "A sends B ...", "B responds with ...", "A transmits ...", "upon receiving X, B sends Y"
- Numbered steps: extract in order, inferring sender/receiver from context
Pseudocode:
- Function signatures with explicit
/sender
parametersreceiver
/send(party, msg)
callsreceive(party)- Return values passed as inputs to the other party's function in the next step
ProVerif (
):.pv
— send on channelout(ch, msg)ch
— receive on channelin(ch, x)
, bind tochx- Match
/out
pairs on the same channel to identify message flowsin
(replication) signals a role that handles multiple sessions!
Tamarin (
):.spthy
premise — receive messageIn(m)m
conclusion — send messageOut(m)m- Rule name and ordering of rules reveal protocol rounds
— fresh random value generated by a partyFr(~x)
facts — security annotations, not messages--[ Label ]->
Preserve the ordering and round structure. Group concurrent sends (broadcast) using
par blocks in the final diagram.
Step S4: Extract Cryptographic Operations
For each protocol step, identify the cryptographic operations performed and which party performs them:
| Spec notation | Operation | Diagram annotation |
|---|---|---|
, | Key generation | |
, | DH / ECDH | |
, | Key derivation | |
, | Signing | |
| Verification | |
, | Encryption | |
| Decryption | |
, | Hash | |
, | Commitment | |
ProVerif | Symmetric encryption | |
ProVerif | Public key derivation | |
ProVerif | Signing | |
Identify security conditions and abort paths:
- Prose: "if verification fails, abort", "only if ...", "reject if ..."
- Pseudocode:
,assert
,requireif ... abort - ProVerif:
if m = expected then ... else 0 - Tamarin: contradicting facts or restriction lemmas
These become
alt blocks in the final diagram.
Step S5: Flag Spec Ambiguities
Before moving to Step 6, check for gaps:
- Unclear message ordering: infer from round structure or section order;
annotate with
⚠️ ordering inferred from spec structure - Implied parties: if a party's role is implied but unnamed, give it a descriptive name and note the inference
- Missing steps: if the spec omits a step that the canonical pattern for
this protocol requires, annotate:
⚠️ spec omits [step] — canonical protocol requires it - Underspecified crypto: if the spec says "encrypt" without specifying
the scheme, annotate:
⚠️ encryption scheme not specified - ProVerif/Tamarin: private channels (
declared withc
or as a private free name) represent out-of-band channels — note themnew c
<!-- Both code path (Steps 1–5) and spec path (Steps S1–S5) continue here -->
Step 6: Generate sequenceDiagram
Produce Mermaid syntax following the rules in references/mermaid-sequence-syntax.md.
Completeness over brevity. Show every distinct message type. Omit repeated loop iterations (use
loop blocks instead), but never omit a distinct protocol
step.
Correctness over aesthetics. The diagram must match what the code actually does. If the code diverges from a known spec, annotate the divergence:
Note over A,B: ⚠️ spec requires MAC here — implementation omits it
Step 7: Verify and Deliver
Before delivering:
- Every participant declared actually sends or receives at least one message
- Arrows point in the correct direction (sender → receiver)
- Cryptographic operations are on the correct party (the one computing them)
- If protocol phases are used, no arrows appear outside a phase block
-
blocks cover known abort/error pathsalt - Diagram renders without syntax errors (check references/mermaid-sequence-syntax.md for common pitfalls)
- If spec divergence found, annotated with
⚠️
Write the diagram to a file. Choose a filename derived from the protocol name, e.g.
noise-xx-handshake.md or x3dh-key-agreement.md. Write a
Markdown file with this structure:
# <Protocol Name> Sequence Diagram \`\`\`mermaid sequenceDiagram ... \`\`\` ## Protocol Summary - **Parties:** ... - **Round complexity:** ... - **Key primitives:** ... - **Authentication:** ... - **Forward secrecy:** ... - **Notable:** [spec deviations or security observations, or "none"]
After writing the file, print an ASCII sequence diagram inline in the response, followed by the Protocol Summary. State the output filename so the user knows where to find the Mermaid source.
Follow all drawing conventions in references/ascii-sequence-diagram.md, including the inline output format.
Decision Tree
── Input is a spec document (not code)? │ └─ Step S1: identify format, read references/spec-parsing-patterns.md │ ── Input is source code (not a spec)? │ └─ Step 1: grep for handshake/round/send/recv entry points │ ── Both spec and code provided? │ └─ Run Spec Workflow (S1–S5) first to build canonical diagram, │ then read code and annotate divergences with ⚠️ │ ── Spec is a known protocol (TLS, Noise, Signal, X3DH, FROST)? │ └─ Read references/protocol-patterns.md and use canonical flow as skeleton │ ── Spec is ProVerif (.pv) or Tamarin (.spthy)? │ └─ Read references/spec-parsing-patterns.md → Formal Models section │ ── Spec message ordering is ambiguous? │ └─ Infer from round/section structure, annotate with ⚠️ │ ── Can't identify parties from spec? │ └─ Check "Parties"/"Notation" sections; for ProVerif read process names; │ for Tamarin read rule names and fact arguments │ ── Don't know which code files implement the protocol? │ └─ Step 1: grep for handshake/round/send/recv entry points │ ── Can't identify parties from struct names? │ └─ Read test files — test setup reveals roles │ ── Protocol runs in-process (no network calls)? │ └─ Treat function argument passing at role boundaries as messages │ ── MPC / threshold protocol with N parties? │ └─ Read references/protocol-patterns.md → MPC section │ ── Mermaid syntax error? │ └─ Read references/mermaid-sequence-syntax.md → Common Pitfalls │ └─ ASCII drawing conventions? └─ Read references/ascii-sequence-diagram.md
Examples
Code path —
examples/simple-handshake/:
— two-party authenticated key exchange (X25519 DH + Ed25519 signing + HKDF + ChaCha20-Poly1305)protocol.py
— exact ASCII diagram and Mermaid file the skill should produce for that protocolexpected-output.md
Spec path (ProVerif) —
examples/simple-proverif/:
— HMAC challenge-response authentication modeled in ProVerifmodel.pv
— step-by-step extraction walkthrough (parties, message flow, crypto ops) and the exact ASCII diagram and Mermaid file the skill should produceexpected-output.md
Study the relevant example before working on an unfamiliar input.
Supporting Documentation
- references/spec-parsing-patterns.md — Extraction rules for RFC, academic paper/pseudocode, informal prose, ProVerif, and Tamarin input formats; read during Step S1
- references/mermaid-sequence-syntax.md — Participant syntax, arrow types, activations, grouping blocks, escaping rules, and common rendering pitfalls
- references/protocol-patterns.md — Canonical message flows for TLS 1.3, Noise, X3DH, Double Ratchet, Shamir secret sharing, commit-reveal, and generic MPC rounds; use as a reference when comparing implementation against spec
- references/ascii-sequence-diagram.md — Column layout, arrow conventions, self-loops, phase labels, and inline output format for the ASCII diagram