17,914 research outputs found
CoLoR: a Coq library on well-founded rewrite relations and its application to the automated verification of termination certificates
Termination is an important property of programs; notably required for
programs formulated in proof assistants. It is a very active subject of
research in the Turing-complete formalism of term rewriting systems, where many
methods and tools have been developed over the years to address this problem.
Ensuring reliability of those tools is therefore an important issue. In this
paper we present a library formalizing important results of the theory of
well-founded (rewrite) relations in the proof assistant Coq. We also present
its application to the automated verification of termination certificates, as
produced by termination tools
Extensional and Intensional Strategies
This paper is a contribution to the theoretical foundations of strategies. We
first present a general definition of abstract strategies which is extensional
in the sense that a strategy is defined explicitly as a set of derivations of
an abstract reduction system. We then move to a more intensional definition
supporting the abstract view but more operational in the sense that it
describes a means for determining such a set. We characterize the class of
extensional strategies that can be defined intensionally. We also give some
hints towards a logical characterization of intensional strategies and propose
a few challenging perspectives
Mechanized semantics
The goal of this lecture is to show how modern theorem provers---in this
case, the Coq proof assistant---can be used to mechanize the specification of
programming languages and their semantics, and to reason over individual
programs and over generic program transformations, as typically found in
compilers. The topics covered include: operational semantics (small-step,
big-step, definitional interpreters); a simple form of denotational semantics;
axiomatic semantics and Hoare logic; generation of verification conditions,
with application to program proof; compilation to virtual machine code and its
proof of correctness; an example of an optimizing program transformation (dead
code elimination) and its proof of correctness
(Leftmost-Outermost) Beta Reduction is Invariant, Indeed
Slot and van Emde Boas' weak invariance thesis states that reasonable
machines can simulate each other within a polynomially overhead in time. Is
lambda-calculus a reasonable machine? Is there a way to measure the
computational complexity of a lambda-term? This paper presents the first
complete positive answer to this long-standing problem. Moreover, our answer is
completely machine-independent and based over a standard notion in the theory
of lambda-calculus: the length of a leftmost-outermost derivation to normal
form is an invariant cost model. Such a theorem cannot be proved by directly
relating lambda-calculus with Turing machines or random access machines,
because of the size explosion problem: there are terms that in a linear number
of steps produce an exponentially long output. The first step towards the
solution is to shift to a notion of evaluation for which the length and the
size of the output are linearly related. This is done by adopting the linear
substitution calculus (LSC), a calculus of explicit substitutions modeled after
linear logic proof nets and admitting a decomposition of leftmost-outermost
derivations with the desired property. Thus, the LSC is invariant with respect
to, say, random access machines. The second step is to show that LSC is
invariant with respect to the lambda-calculus. The size explosion problem seems
to imply that this is not possible: having the same notions of normal form,
evaluation in the LSC is exponentially longer than in the lambda-calculus. We
solve such an impasse by introducing a new form of shared normal form and
shared reduction, deemed useful. Useful evaluation avoids those steps that only
unshare the output without contributing to beta-redexes, i.e. the steps that
cause the blow-up in size. The main technical contribution of the paper is
indeed the definition of useful reductions and the thorough analysis of their
properties.Comment: arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:1405.331
BeSpaceD: Towards a Tool Framework and Methodology for the Specification and Verification of Spatial Behavior of Distributed Software Component Systems
In this report, we present work towards a framework for modeling and checking
behavior of spatially distributed component systems. Design goals of our
framework are the ability to model spatial behavior in a component oriented,
simple and intuitive way, the possibility to automatically analyse and verify
systems and integration possibilities with other modeling and verification
tools. We present examples and the verification steps necessary to prove
properties such as range coverage or the absence of collisions between
components and technical details
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