174 research outputs found

    Petri Nets at Modelling and Control of Discrete-Event Systems Containing Nondeterminism - Part 1

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    Discrete-Event Systems are discrete in nature, driven by discrete events. Petri Nets are one of the mostly used tools for their modelling and control synthesis. Place/Transitions Petri Nets, Timed Petri Nets, Controlled Petri Nets are suitable when a modelled object is deterministic. When the system model contains uncontrollable/unobservable transitions and unobservable/unmeasurable places or other failures, such kinds of Petri Nets are insufficient for the purpose. In such a case Labelled Petri Nets and/or Interpreted Petri Nets have to be used. Particularities and mutual differences of individual kinds of Petri Nets are pointed out and their applicability to modelling and control of Discrete-Event Systems are described and tested

    Stochastic DES Fault Diagnosis with Coloured Interpreted Petri Nets

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    [EN] This proposal presents an online method to detect and isolate faults in stochastic discrete event systems without previous model. A coloured timed interpreted Petri Net generates the normal behavior language after an identification stage.The next step is fault detection that is carried out by comparing the observed event sequences with the expected event sequences. Once a new fault is detected, a learning algorithm changes the structure of the diagnoser, so it is able to learn new fault languages. Moreover, the diagnoser includes timed events to represent and diagnose stochastic languages. Finally, this paper proposes a detectability condition for stochastic DES and the sufficient and necessary conditions are proved.This work was supported by a grant from the Universidad del Cauca, Reference 2.3-31.2/05 2011.Muñoz-Añasco, DM.; Correcher Salvador, A.; García Moreno, E.; Morant Anglada, FJ. (2015). Stochastic DES Fault Diagnosis with Coloured Interpreted Petri Nets. Mathematical Problems in Engineering. 2015:1-13. https://doi.org/10.1155/2015/303107S1132015Jiang, S., & Kumar, R. (2004). Failure Diagnosis of Discrete-Event Systems With Linear-Time Temporal Logic Specifications. IEEE Transactions on Automatic Control, 49(6), 934-945. doi:10.1109/tac.2004.829616Zaytoon, J., & Lafortune, S. (2013). Overview of fault diagnosis methods for Discrete Event Systems. Annual Reviews in Control, 37(2), 308-320. doi:10.1016/j.arcontrol.2013.09.009Sampath, M., Sengupta, R., Lafortune, S., Sinnamohideen, K., & Teneketzis, D. (1995). Diagnosability of discrete-event systems. IEEE Transactions on Automatic Control, 40(9), 1555-1575. doi:10.1109/9.412626Sampath, M., Sengupta, R., Lafortune, S., Sinnamohideen, K., & Teneketzis, D. C. (1996). Failure diagnosis using discrete-event models. IEEE Transactions on Control Systems Technology, 4(2), 105-124. doi:10.1109/87.486338Estrada-Vargas, A. P., López-Mellado, E., & Lesage, J.-J. (2010). A Comparative Analysis of Recent Identification Approaches for Discrete-Event Systems. Mathematical Problems in Engineering, 2010, 1-21. doi:10.1155/2010/453254Cabasino, M. P., Giua, A., & Seatzu, C. (2010). Fault detection for discrete event systems using Petri nets with unobservable transitions. Automatica, 46(9), 1531-1539. doi:10.1016/j.automatica.2010.06.013Prock, J. (1991). A new technique for fault detection using Petri nets. Automatica, 27(2), 239-245. doi:10.1016/0005-1098(91)90074-cAghasaryan, A., Fabre, E., Benveniste, A., Boubour, R., & Jard, C. (1998). Discrete Event Dynamic Systems, 8(2), 203-231. doi:10.1023/a:1008241818642Hadjicostis, C. N., & Verghese, G. C. (1999). Monitoring Discrete Event Systems Using Petri Net Embeddings. Application and Theory of Petri Nets 1999, 188-207. doi:10.1007/3-540-48745-x_12Benveniste, A., Fabre, E., Haar, S., & Jard, C. (2003). Diagnosis of asynchronous discrete-event systems: a net unfolding approach. IEEE Transactions on Automatic Control, 48(5), 714-727. doi:10.1109/tac.2003.811249Genc, S., & Lafortune, S. (2003). Distributed Diagnosis of Discrete-Event Systems Using Petri Nets. Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 316-336. doi:10.1007/3-540-44919-1_21Genc, S., & Lafortune, S. (2007). Distributed Diagnosis of Place-Bordered Petri Nets. IEEE Transactions on Automation Science and Engineering, 4(2), 206-219. doi:10.1109/tase.2006.879916Ramirez-Trevino, A., Ruiz-Beltran, E., Rivera-Rangel, I., & Lopez-Mellado, E. (2007). Online Fault Diagnosis of Discrete Event Systems. A Petri Net-Based Approach. IEEE Transactions on Automation Science and Engineering, 4(1), 31-39. doi:10.1109/tase.2006.872120Dotoli, M., Fanti, M. P., Mangini, A. M., & Ukovich, W. (2009). On-line fault detection in discrete event systems by Petri nets and integer linear programming. Automatica, 45(11), 2665-2672. doi:10.1016/j.automatica.2009.07.021Fanti, M. P., Mangini, A. M., & Ukovich, W. (2013). Fault Detection by Labeled Petri Nets in Centralized and Distributed Approaches. IEEE Transactions on Automation Science and Engineering, 10(2), 392-404. doi:10.1109/tase.2012.2203596Basile, F., Chiacchio, P., & De Tommasi, G. (2009). An Efficient Approach for Online Diagnosis of Discrete Event Systems. IEEE Transactions on Automatic Control, 54(4), 748-759. doi:10.1109/tac.2009.2014932Roth, M., Lesage, J.-J., & Litz, L. (2011). The concept of residuals for fault localization in discrete event systems. Control Engineering Practice, 19(9), 978-988. doi:10.1016/j.conengprac.2011.02.008Roth, M., Schneider, S., Lesage, J.-J., & Litz, L. (2012). Fault detection and isolation in manufacturing systems with an identified discrete event model. International Journal of Systems Science, 43(10), 1826-1841. doi:10.1080/00207721.2011.649369Chung-Hsien Kuo, & Han-Pang Huang. (2000). Failure modeling and process monitoring for flexible manufacturing systems using colored timed Petri nets. IEEE Transactions on Robotics and Automation, 16(3), 301-312. doi:10.1109/70.850648Ramirez-Trevino, A., Ruiz-Beltran, E., Aramburo-Lizarraga, J., & Lopez-Mellado, E. (2012). Structural Diagnosability of DES and Design of Reduced Petri Net Diagnosers. IEEE Transactions on Systems, Man, and Cybernetics - Part A: Systems and Humans, 42(2), 416-429. doi:10.1109/tsmca.2011.2169950Cabasino, M. P., Giua, A., & Seatzu, C. (2014). Diagnosability of Discrete-Event Systems Using Labeled Petri Nets. IEEE Transactions on Automation Science and Engineering, 11(1), 144-153. doi:10.1109/tase.2013.2289360Yao, L., Feng, L., & Jiang, B. (2014). Fault Diagnosis and Fault Tolerant Control for Non-Gaussian Singular Time-Delayed Stochastic Distribution Systems. Mathematical Problems in Engineering, 2014, 1-9. doi:10.1155/2014/937583Murata, T. (1989). Petri nets: Properties, analysis and applications. Proceedings of the IEEE, 77(4), 541-580. doi:10.1109/5.24143Dotoli, M., Fanti, M. P., & Mangini, A. M. (2008). Real time identification of discrete event systems using Petri nets. Automatica, 44(5), 1209-1219. doi:10.1016/j.automatica.2007.10.014Muñoz, D. M., Correcher, A., García, E., & Morant, F. (2014). Identification of Stochastic Timed Discrete Event Systems with st-IPN. Mathematical Problems in Engineering, 2014, 1-21. doi:10.1155/2014/835312Latorre-Biel, J.-I., Jiménez-Macías, E., Pérez de la Parte, M., Blanco-Fernández, J., & Martínez-Cámara, E. (2014). Control of Discrete Event Systems by Means of Discrete Optimization and Disjunctive Colored PNs: Application to Manufacturing Facilities. Abstract and Applied Analysis, 2014, 1-16. doi:10.1155/2014/821707Cabasino, M. P., Giua, A., Lafortune, S., & Seatzu, C. (2012). A New Approach for Diagnosability Analysis of Petri Nets Using Verifier Nets. IEEE Transactions on Automatic Control, 57(12), 3104-3117. doi:10.1109/tac.2012.2200372Abdelwahed, S., Karsai, G., Mahadevan, N., & Ofsthun, S. C. (2009). Practical Implementation of Diagnosis Systems Using Timed Failure Propagation Graph Models. IEEE Transactions on Instrumentation and Measurement, 58(2), 240-247. doi:10.1109/tim.2008.200595

    Diagnosis of Discrete Event Systems with Petri Nets

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    A survey on efficient diagnosability tests for automata and bounded Petri nets

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    This paper presents a survey and evaluation of the efficiency of polynomial diagnosability algorithms for systems modeled by Petri nets and automata. A modified verification algorithm that reduces the state space by exploiting symmetry and abstracting unobservable transitions is also proposed. We show the importance of minimal explanations on the performance of diagnosability verifiers. Different verifiers are compared in terms of state space and elapsed time. It is shown that the minimal explanation notion involved in the modified basis reachability graph, a graph presented by Cabasino et al. [3] for diagnosability analysis of Petri nets, has great impact also on automata-based diagnosability methods. The evaluation often shows improved computation times of a factor 1000 or more when the concept of minimal explanation is included in the computation

    Diagnostic Based on Estimation Using Linear Programming for Partially Observable Petri Nets with Indistinguishable Events

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    In this paper, we design a diagnostic technique for a partially observed labelled Petri net where the faults of the system are modelled by unobservable transitions. The fault detection and isolation uses an on-line count vector estimation associated with the firing of unobservable transitions exploiting the observation of firing occurrences of some observable transitions. The support of the approach is an algebraic description of the process under the form of a polyhedron developed on a receding horizon. We show that a diagnostic can be made despite that different transitions can share the same label and that the unobservable part of the Petri net can contain circuits

    Supervisory Control and Analysis of Partially-observed Discrete Event Systems

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    Nowadays, a variety of real-world systems fall into discrete event systems (DES). In practical scenarios, due to facts like limited sensor technique, sensor failure, unstable network and even the intrusion of malicious agents, it might occur that some events are unobservable, multiple events are indistinguishable in observations, and observations of some events are nondeterministic. By considering various practical scenarios, increasing attention in the DES community has been paid to partially-observed DES, which in this thesis refer broadly to those DES with partial and/or unreliable observations. In this thesis, we focus on two topics of partially-observed DES, namely, supervisory control and analysis. The first topic includes two research directions in terms of system models. One is the supervisory control of DES with both unobservable and uncontrollable events, focusing on the forbidden state problem; the other is the supervisory control of DES vulnerable to sensor-reading disguising attacks (SD-attacks), which is also interpreted as DES with nondeterministic observations, addressing both the forbidden state problem and the liveness-enforcing problem. Petri nets (PN) are used as a reference formalism in this topic. First, we study the forbidden state problem in the framework of PN with both unobservable and uncontrollable transitions, assuming that unobservable transitions are uncontrollable. For ordinary PN subject to an admissible Generalized Mutual Exclusion Constraint (GMEC), an optimal on-line control policy with polynomial complexity is proposed provided that a particular subnet, called observation subnet, satisfies certain conditions in structure. It is then discussed how to obtain an optimal on-line control policy for PN subject to an arbitrary GMEC. Next, we still consider the forbidden state problem but in PN vulnerable to SD-attacks. Assuming the control specification in terms of a GMEC, we propose three methods to derive on-line control policies. The first two lead to an optimal policy but are computationally inefficient for large-size systems, while the third method computes a policy with timely response even for large-size systems but at the expense of optimality. Finally, we investigate the liveness-enforcing problem still assuming that the system is vulnerable to SD-attacks. In this problem, the plant is modelled as a bounded PN, which allows us to off-line compute a supervisor starting from constructing the reachability graph of the PN. Then, based on repeatedly computing a more restrictive liveness-enforcing supervisor under no attack and constructing a basic supervisor, an off-line method that synthesizes a liveness-enforcing supervisor tolerant to an SD-attack is proposed. In the second topic, we care about the verification of properties related to system security. Two properties are considered, i.e., fault-predictability and event-based opacity. The former is a property in the literature, characterizing the situation that the occurrence of any fault in a system is predictable, while the latter is a newly proposed property in the thesis, which describes the fact that secret events of a system cannot be revealed to an external observer within their critical horizons. In the case of fault-predictability, DES are modeled by labeled PN. A necessary and sufficient condition for fault-predictability is derived by characterizing the structure of the Predictor Graph. Furthermore, two rules are proposed to reduce the size of a PN, which allow us to analyze the fault-predictability of the original net by verifying that of the reduced net. When studying event-based opacity, we use deterministic finite-state automata as the reference formalism. Considering different scenarios, we propose four notions, namely, K-observation event-opacity, infinite-observation event-opacity, event-opacity and combinational event-opacity. Moreover, verifiers are proposed to analyze these properties

    VERIFICATION AND APPLICATION OF DETECTABILITY BASED ON PETRI NETS

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    In many real-world systems, due to limitations of sensors or constraints of the environment, the system dynamics is usually not perfectly known. However, the state information of the system is usually crucial for the purpose of decision making. The state of the system needs to be determined in many applications. Due to its importance, the state estimation problem has received considerable attention in the discrete event system (DES) community. Recently, the state estimation problem has been studied systematically in the framework of detectability. The detectability properties characterize the possibility to determine the current and the subsequent states of a system after the observation of a finite number of events generated by the system. To model and analyze practical systems, powerful DES models are needed to describe the different observation behaviors of the system. Secondly, due to the state explosion problem, analysis methods that rely on exhaustively enumerating all possible states are not applicable for practical systems. It is necessary to develop more efficient and achievable verification methods for detectability. Furthermore, in this thesis, efficient detectability verification methods using Petri nets are investigated, then detectability is extended to a more general definition (C-detectability) that only requires that a given set of crucial states can be distinguished from other states. Formal definitions and efficient verification methods for C-detectability properties are proposed. Finally, C-detectability is applied to the railway signal system to verify the feasibility of this property: 1. Four types of detectability are extended from finite automata to labeled Petri nets. In particular, strong detectability, weak detectability, periodically strong detectability, and periodically weak detectability are formally defined in labeled Petri nets. 2. Based on the notion of basis reachability graph (BRG), a practically efficient approach (the BRG-observer method) to verify the four detectability properties in bounded labeled Petri nets is proposed. Using basis markings, there is no need to enumerate all the markings that are consistent with an observation. It has been shown by other researchers that the size of the BRG is usually much smaller than the size of the reachability graph (RG). Thus, the method improves the analysis efficiency and avoids the state space explosion problem. 3. Three novel approaches for the verification of the strong detectability and periodically strong detectability are proposed, which use three different structures whose construction has a polynomial complexity. Moreover, rather than computing all cycles of the structure at hand, which is NP-hard, it is shown that strong detectability can be verified looking at the strongly connected components whose computation also has a polynomial complexity. As a result, they have lower computational complexity than other methods in the literature. 4. Detectability could be too restrictive in real applications. Thus, detectability is extended to C-detectability that only requires that a given set of crucial states can be distinguished from other states. Four types of C-detectability are defined in the framework of labeled Petri nets. Moreover, efficient approaches are proposed to verify such properties in the case of bounded labeled Petri net systems based on the BRG. 5. Finally, a general modeling framework of railway systems is presented for the states estimation using labeled Petri nets. Then, C-detectability is applied to railway signal systems to verify its feasibility in the real-world system. Taking the RBC handover procedure in the Chinese train control system level 3 (CTCS-3) as an example, the RBC handover procedure is modeled using labeled Petri nets. Then based on the proposed approaches, it is shown that that the RBC handover procedure satisfies strongly C-detectability

    AUTOMATED SYNTHESIS OF VIRTUALBLOCKS FOR INTERFACING SYSTEM UNDER TEST

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    In this thesis, I/O signal recognizers, called VIRTUALBLOCKS, are synthesized to interface with a SYSTEM UNDER TEST (SUT). Methods for automated synthesis of virtualblocks allow us to simulate environment interfaces with SUT and also perform fault detection on SUT. Such methods must be able to recognize incoming sequences of signals from SUT, and upon the signal recognition determine the proper outgoing sequences of signals to SUT. We characterize our systems into four distinctive systems: system under test, AUXILIARY SYSTEM, controller and external environment. The auxiliary system is represented as a form of condition system Petri net (virtualblocks) and interacts with SUT along with the interaction among the controller and the external environment. Fault detection is performed by subsystems called DETECTBLOCKS synthesized from the virtualblocks. We present construction procedures for virtualblocks andamp; detectblocks and discuss the notion of LEGALITY and DETECTABILITY. Finally, we illustrate our approach using a model of a scanner control unit

    Diagnosability Analysis of Labeled Time Petri Net Systems

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    In this paper, we focus on two notions of diagnosability for labeled Time Petri net (PN) systems: K-diagnosability implies that any fault occurrence can be detected after at most K observations, while Ď„-diagnosability implies that any fault occurrence can be detected after at most Ď„ time units. A procedure to analyze such properties isprovided.The proposedapproach uses the Modified State Class Graph, a graph the authors recently introduced for the marking estimation of labeled Time PN systems,which providesan exhaustive description of the system behavior. A preliminary diagnosabilty analysis of the underlying logic system based on classical approaches taken from the literature is required. Then, the solution of some linear programming problems should be performed to take into account the timing constraints associated with transitions
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