2,720 research outputs found

    Applicability of fair simulation

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    AbstractIn this paper we compare four notions of fair simulation: direct [9], delay [12], game [19], and exists [16]. Our comparison refers to three main aspects: The time complexity of constructing the fair simulation, the ability to use it for minimization, and the relationship between the fair simulations and universal branching-time logics. We developed a practical application that is based on this comparison. The application is a new implementation for the assume-guarantee modular framework presented By Grumberg at al. in [ACM Transactions on Programming Languages and Systems (TOPLAS), 16 (1994) 843]. The new implementation significantly improves the complexity of the framework

    Applying Formal Methods to Networking: Theory, Techniques and Applications

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    Despite its great importance, modern network infrastructure is remarkable for the lack of rigor in its engineering. The Internet which began as a research experiment was never designed to handle the users and applications it hosts today. The lack of formalization of the Internet architecture meant limited abstractions and modularity, especially for the control and management planes, thus requiring for every new need a new protocol built from scratch. This led to an unwieldy ossified Internet architecture resistant to any attempts at formal verification, and an Internet culture where expediency and pragmatism are favored over formal correctness. Fortunately, recent work in the space of clean slate Internet design---especially, the software defined networking (SDN) paradigm---offers the Internet community another chance to develop the right kind of architecture and abstractions. This has also led to a great resurgence in interest of applying formal methods to specification, verification, and synthesis of networking protocols and applications. In this paper, we present a self-contained tutorial of the formidable amount of work that has been done in formal methods, and present a survey of its applications to networking.Comment: 30 pages, submitted to IEEE Communications Surveys and Tutorial
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