232 research outputs found

    Mightyl: A compositional translation from mitl to timed automata

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    Metric Interval Temporal Logic (MITL) was first proposed in the early 1990s as a specification formalism for real-time systems. Apart from its appealing intuitive syntax, there are also theoretical evidences that make MITL a prime real-time counterpart of Linear Temporal Logic (LTL). Unfortunately, the tool support for MITL verification is still lacking to this day. In this paper, we propose a new construction from MITL to timed automata via very-weak one-clock alternating timed automata. Our construction subsumes the well-known construction from LTL to Büchi automata by Gastin and Oddoux and yet has the additional benefits of being compositional and integrating easily with existing tools. We implement the construction in our new tool MightyL and report on experiments using Uppaal and LTSmin as back-ends

    Revisiting timed logics with automata modalities

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    © 2019 ACM. It is well known that (timed) ω-regular properties such as 'p holds at every even position' and 'p occurs at least three times within the next 10 time units' cannot be expressed in Metric Interval Temporal Logic (MITL) and Event Clock Logic (ECL). A standard remedy to this deficiency is to extend these with modalities defined in terms of automata. In this paper, we show that the logics EMITL0, ∞ (adding non-deterministic finite automata modalities into the fragment of MITL with only lower- and upper-bound constraints) and EECL (adding automata modalities into ECL) are already as expressive as EMITL (full MITL with automata modalities). In particular, the satisfiability and model-checking problems for EMITL0, ∞ and EECL are PSPACE-complete, whereas the same problems for EMITL are EXPSPACE-complete. We also provide a simple translation from EMITL0, ∞ to diagonal-free timed automata, which enables practical satisfiability and model checking based on off-the-shelf tools

    Timed-Automata-Based Verification of MITL over Signals

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    It has been argued that the most suitable semantic model for real-time formalisms is the non-negative real line (signals), i.e. the continuous semantics, which naturally captures the continuous evolution of system states. Existing tools like UPPAAL are, however, based on omega-sequences with timestamps (timed words), i.e. the pointwise semantics. Furthermore, the support for logic formalisms is very limited in these tools. In this article, we amend these issues by a compositional translation from Metric Temporal Interval Logic (MITL) to signal automata. Combined with an emptiness-preserving encoding of signal automata into timed automata, we obtain a practical automata-based approach to MITL model-checking over signals. We implement the translation in our tool MightyL and report on case studies using LTSmin as the back-end

    Timed Automata Approach for Motion Planning Using Metric Interval Temporal Logic

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    In this paper, we consider the robot motion (or task) planning problem under some given time bounded high level specifications. We use metric interval temporal logic (MITL), a member of the temporal logic family, to represent the task specification and then we provide a constructive way to generate a timed automaton and methods to look for accepting runs on the automaton to find a feasible motion (or path) sequence for the robot to complete the task.Comment: Full Version for ECC 201

    Real-Time Synthesis is Hard!

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    We study the reactive synthesis problem (RS) for specifications given in Metric Interval Temporal Logic (MITL). RS is known to be undecidable in a very general setting, but on infinite words only; and only the very restrictive BRRS subcase is known to be decidable (see D'Souza et al. and Bouyer et al.). In this paper, we precise the decidability border of MITL synthesis. We show RS is undecidable on finite words too, and present a landscape of restrictions (both on the logic and on the possible controllers) that are still undecidable. On the positive side, we revisit BRRS and introduce an efficient on-the-fly algorithm to solve it

    Cooperative Task Planning of Multi-Agent Systems Under Timed Temporal Specifications

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    In this paper the problem of cooperative task planning of multi-agent systems when timed constraints are imposed to the system is investigated. We consider timed constraints given by Metric Interval Temporal Logic (MITL). We propose a method for automatic control synthesis in a two-stage systematic procedure. With this method we guarantee that all the agents satisfy their own individual task specifications as well as that the team satisfies a team global task specification.Comment: Submitted to American Control Conference 201
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