11,829 research outputs found
Deciding subset relationship of co-inductively defined set constants
Static analysis of different non-strict functional programming languages makes use of set constants like Top, Inf, and Bot denoting all expressions, all lists without a last Nil as tail, and all non-terminating programs, respectively. We use a set language that permits union, constructors and recursive definition of set constants with a greatest fixpoint semantics. This paper proves decidability, in particular EXPTIMEcompleteness, of subset relationship of co-inductively defined sets by using algorithms and results from tree automata. This shows decidability of the test for set inclusion, which is required by certain strictness analysis algorithms in lazy functional programming languages
Decidability of the Monadic Shallow Linear First-Order Fragment with Straight Dismatching Constraints
The monadic shallow linear Horn fragment is well-known to be decidable and
has many application, e.g., in security protocol analysis, tree automata, or
abstraction refinement. It was a long standing open problem how to extend the
fragment to the non-Horn case, preserving decidability, that would, e.g.,
enable to express non-determinism in protocols. We prove decidability of the
non-Horn monadic shallow linear fragment via ordered resolution further
extended with dismatching constraints and discuss some applications of the new
decidable fragment.Comment: 29 pages, long version of CADE-26 pape
Alternating register automata on finite words and trees
We study alternating register automata on data words and data trees in
relation to logics. A data word (resp. data tree) is a word (resp. tree) whose
every position carries a label from a finite alphabet and a data value from an
infinite domain. We investigate one-way automata with alternating control over
data words or trees, with one register for storing data and comparing them for
equality. This is a continuation of the study started by Demri, Lazic and
Jurdzinski. From the standpoint of register automata models, this work aims at
two objectives: (1) simplifying the existent decidability proofs for the
emptiness problem for alternating register automata; and (2) exhibiting
decidable extensions for these models. From the logical perspective, we show
that (a) in the case of data words, satisfiability of LTL with one register and
quantification over data values is decidable; and (b) the satisfiability
problem for the so-called forward fragment of XPath on XML documents is
decidable, even in the presence of DTDs and even of key constraints. The
decidability is obtained through a reduction to the automata model introduced.
This fragment contains the child, descendant, next-sibling and
following-sibling axes, as well as data equality and inequality tests
On Spatial Conjunction as Second-Order Logic
Spatial conjunction is a powerful construct for reasoning about dynamically
allocated data structures, as well as concurrent, distributed and mobile
computation. While researchers have identified many uses of spatial
conjunction, its precise expressive power compared to traditional logical
constructs was not previously known. In this paper we establish the expressive
power of spatial conjunction. We construct an embedding from first-order logic
with spatial conjunction into second-order logic, and more surprisingly, an
embedding from full second order logic into first-order logic with spatial
conjunction. These embeddings show that the satisfiability of formulas in
first-order logic with spatial conjunction is equivalent to the satisfiability
of formulas in second-order logic. These results explain the great expressive
power of spatial conjunction and can be used to show that adding unrestricted
spatial conjunction to a decidable logic leads to an undecidable logic. As one
example, we show that adding unrestricted spatial conjunction to two-variable
logic leads to undecidability. On the side of decidability, the embedding into
second-order logic immediately implies the decidability of first-order logic
with a form of spatial conjunction over trees. The embedding into spatial
conjunction also has useful consequences: because a restricted form of spatial
conjunction in two-variable logic preserves decidability, we obtain that a
correspondingly restricted form of second-order quantification in two-variable
logic is decidable. The resulting language generalizes the first-order theory
of boolean algebra over sets and is useful in reasoning about the contents of
data structures in object-oriented languages.Comment: 16 page
Decision Problems for Petri Nets with Names
We prove several decidability and undecidability results for nu-PN, an
extension of P/T nets with pure name creation and name management. We give a
simple proof of undecidability of reachability, by reducing reachability in
nets with inhibitor arcs to it. Thus, the expressive power of nu-PN strictly
surpasses that of P/T nets. We prove that nu-PN are Well Structured Transition
Systems. In particular, we obtain decidability of coverability and termination,
so that the expressive power of Turing machines is not reached. Moreover, they
are strictly Well Structured, so that the boundedness problem is also
decidable. We consider two properties, width-boundedness and depth-boundedness,
that factorize boundedness. Width-boundedness has already been proven to be
decidable. We prove here undecidability of depth-boundedness. Finally, we
obtain Ackermann-hardness results for all our decidable decision problems.Comment: 20 pages, 7 figure
(Un)Decidability Results for Word Equations with Length and Regular Expression Constraints
We prove several decidability and undecidability results for the
satisfiability and validity problems for languages that can express solutions
to word equations with length constraints. The atomic formulas over this
language are equality over string terms (word equations), linear inequality
over the length function (length constraints), and membership in regular sets.
These questions are important in logic, program analysis, and formal
verification. Variants of these questions have been studied for many decades by
mathematicians. More recently, practical satisfiability procedures (aka SMT
solvers) for these formulas have become increasingly important in the context
of security analysis for string-manipulating programs such as web applications.
We prove three main theorems. First, we give a new proof of undecidability
for the validity problem for the set of sentences written as a forall-exists
quantifier alternation applied to positive word equations. A corollary of this
undecidability result is that this set is undecidable even with sentences with
at most two occurrences of a string variable. Second, we consider Boolean
combinations of quantifier-free formulas constructed out of word equations and
length constraints. We show that if word equations can be converted to a solved
form, a form relevant in practice, then the satisfiability problem for Boolean
combinations of word equations and length constraints is decidable. Third, we
show that the satisfiability problem for quantifier-free formulas over word
equations in regular solved form, length constraints, and the membership
predicate over regular expressions is also decidable.Comment: Invited Paper at ADDCT Workshop 2013 (co-located with CADE 2013
Quadratic Word Equations with Length Constraints, Counter Systems, and Presburger Arithmetic with Divisibility
Word equations are a crucial element in the theoretical foundation of
constraint solving over strings, which have received a lot of attention in
recent years. A word equation relates two words over string variables and
constants. Its solution amounts to a function mapping variables to constant
strings that equate the left and right hand sides of the equation. While the
problem of solving word equations is decidable, the decidability of the problem
of solving a word equation with a length constraint (i.e., a constraint
relating the lengths of words in the word equation) has remained a
long-standing open problem. In this paper, we focus on the subclass of
quadratic word equations, i.e., in which each variable occurs at most twice. We
first show that the length abstractions of solutions to quadratic word
equations are in general not Presburger-definable. We then describe a class of
counter systems with Presburger transition relations which capture the length
abstraction of a quadratic word equation with regular constraints. We provide
an encoding of the effect of a simple loop of the counter systems in the theory
of existential Presburger Arithmetic with divisibility (PAD). Since PAD is
decidable, we get a decision procedure for quadratic words equations with
length constraints for which the associated counter system is \emph{flat}
(i.e., all nodes belong to at most one cycle). We show a decidability result
(in fact, also an NP algorithm with a PAD oracle) for a recently proposed
NP-complete fragment of word equations called regular-oriented word equations,
together with length constraints. Decidability holds when the constraints are
additionally extended with regular constraints with a 1-weak control structure.Comment: 18 page
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