3 research outputs found
Runtime Verification Based on Executable Models: On-the-Fly Matching of Timed Traces
Runtime verification is checking whether a system execution satisfies or
violates a given correctness property. A procedure that automatically, and
typically on the fly, verifies conformance of the system's behavior to the
specified property is called a monitor. Nowadays, a variety of formalisms are
used to express properties on observed behavior of computer systems, and a lot
of methods have been proposed to construct monitors. However, it is a frequent
situation when advanced formalisms and methods are not needed, because an
executable model of the system is available. The original purpose and structure
of the model are out of importance; rather what is required is that the system
and its model have similar sets of interfaces. In this case, monitoring is
carried out as follows. Two "black boxes", the system and its reference model,
are executed in parallel and stimulated with the same input sequences; the
monitor dynamically captures their output traces and tries to match them. The
main problem is that a model is usually more abstract than the real system,
both in terms of functionality and timing. Therefore, trace-to-trace matching
is not straightforward and allows the system to produce events in different
order or even miss some of them. The paper studies on-the-fly conformance
relations for timed systems (i.e., systems whose inputs and outputs are
distributed along the time axis). It also suggests a practice-oriented
methodology for creating and configuring monitors for timed systems based on
executable models. The methodology has been successfully applied to a number of
industrial projects of simulation-based hardware verification.Comment: In Proceedings MBT 2013, arXiv:1303.037