3 research outputs found

    Finite Automata Algorithms in Map-Reduce

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    In this thesis the intersection of several large nondeterministic finite automata (NFA's) as well as minimization of a large deterministic finite automaton (DFA) in map-reduce are studied. We have derived a lower bound on replication rate for computing NFA intersections and provided three concrete algorithms for the problem. Our investigation of the replication rate for each of all three algorithms shows where each algorithm could be applied through detailed experiments on large datasets of finite automata. Denoting n the number of states in DFA A, we propose an algorithm to minimize A in n map-reduce rounds in the worst-case. Our experiments, however, indicate that the number of rounds, in practice, is much smaller than n for all DFA's we examined. In other words, this algorithm converges in d iterations by computing the equivalence classes of each state, where d is the diameter of the input DFA

    POPLMark reloaded: Mechanizing proofs by logical relations

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    We propose a new collection of benchmark problems in mechanizing the metatheory of programming languages, in order to compare and push the state of the art of proof assistants. In particular, we focus on proofs using logical relations (LRs) and propose establishing strong normalization of a simply typed calculus with a proof by Kripke-style LRs as a benchmark. We give a modern view of this well-understood problem by formulating our LR on well-typed terms. Using this case study, we share some of the lessons learned tackling this problem in different dependently typed proof environments. In particular, we consider the mechanization in Beluga, a proof environment that supports higher-order abstract syntax encodings and contrast it to the development and strategies used in general-purpose proof assistants such as Coq and Agda. The goal of this paper is to engage the community in discussions on what support in proof environments is needed to truly bring mechanized metatheory to the masses and engage said community in the crafting of future benchmarks

    35th Symposium on Theoretical Aspects of Computer Science: STACS 2018, February 28-March 3, 2018, Caen, France

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