2,011 research outputs found
Deadlock detection of Java Bytecode
This paper presents a technique for deadlock detection of Java programs. The
technique uses typing rules for extracting infinite-state abstract models of
the dependencies among the components of the Java intermediate language -- the
Java bytecode. Models are subsequently analysed by means of an extension of a
solver that we have defined for detecting deadlocks in process calculi. Our
technique is complemented by a prototype verifier that also covers most of the
Java features.Comment: Pre-proceedings paper presented at the 27th International Symposium
on Logic-Based Program Synthesis and Transformation (LOPSTR 2017), Namur,
Belgium, 10-12 October 2017 (arXiv:1708.07854
Sound Static Deadlock Analysis for C/Pthreads (Extended Version)
We present a static deadlock analysis approach for C/pthreads. The design of
our method has been guided by the requirement to analyse real-world code. Our
approach is sound (i.e., misses no deadlocks) for programs that have defined
behaviour according to the C standard, and precise enough to prove
deadlock-freedom for a large number of programs. The method consists of a
pipeline of several analyses that build on a new context- and thread-sensitive
abstract interpretation framework. We further present a lightweight dependency
analysis to identify statements relevant to deadlock analysis and thus speed up
the overall analysis. In our experimental evaluation, we succeeded to prove
deadlock-freedom for 262 programs from the Debian GNU/Linux distribution with
in total 2.6 MLOC in less than 11 hours
Towards Practical Graph-Based Verification for an Object-Oriented Concurrency Model
To harness the power of multi-core and distributed platforms, and to make the
development of concurrent software more accessible to software engineers,
different object-oriented concurrency models such as SCOOP have been proposed.
Despite the practical importance of analysing SCOOP programs, there are
currently no general verification approaches that operate directly on program
code without additional annotations. One reason for this is the multitude of
partially conflicting semantic formalisations for SCOOP (either in theory or
by-implementation). Here, we propose a simple graph transformation system (GTS)
based run-time semantics for SCOOP that grasps the most common features of all
known semantics of the language. This run-time model is implemented in the
state-of-the-art GTS tool GROOVE, which allows us to simulate, analyse, and
verify a subset of SCOOP programs with respect to deadlocks and other
behavioural properties. Besides proposing the first approach to verify SCOOP
programs by automatic translation to GTS, we also highlight our experiences of
applying GTS (and especially GROOVE) for specifying semantics in the form of a
run-time model, which should be transferable to GTS models for other concurrent
languages and libraries.Comment: In Proceedings GaM 2015, arXiv:1504.0244
Prototyping Formal System Models with Active Objects
We propose active object languages as a development tool for formal system
models of distributed systems. Additionally to a formalization based on a term
rewriting system, we use established Software Engineering concepts, including
software product lines and object orientation that come with extensive tool
support. We illustrate our modeling approach by prototyping a weak memory
model. The resulting executable model is modular and has clear interfaces
between communicating participants through object-oriented modeling.
Relaxations of the basic memory model are expressed as self-contained variants
of a software product line. As a modeling language we use the formal active
object language ABS which comes with an extensive tool set. This permits rapid
formalization of core ideas, early validity checks in terms of formal invariant
proofs, and debugging support by executing test runs. Hence, our approach
supports the prototyping of formal system models with early feedback.Comment: In Proceedings ICE 2018, arXiv:1810.0205
A Graph-Based Semantics Workbench for Concurrent Asynchronous Programs
A number of novel programming languages and libraries have been proposed that
offer simpler-to-use models of concurrency than threads. It is challenging,
however, to devise execution models that successfully realise their
abstractions without forfeiting performance or introducing unintended
behaviours. This is exemplified by SCOOP---a concurrent object-oriented
message-passing language---which has seen multiple semantics proposed and
implemented over its evolution. We propose a "semantics workbench" with fully
and semi-automatic tools for SCOOP, that can be used to analyse and compare
programs with respect to different execution models. We demonstrate its use in
checking the consistency of semantics by applying it to a set of representative
programs, and highlighting a deadlock-related discrepancy between the principal
execution models of the language. Our workbench is based on a modular and
parameterisable graph transformation semantics implemented in the GROOVE tool.
We discuss how graph transformations are leveraged to atomically model
intricate language abstractions, and how the visual yet algebraic nature of the
model can be used to ascertain soundness.Comment: Accepted for publication in the proceedings of FASE 2016 (to appear
A Compositional Deadlock Detector for Android Java
We develop a static deadlock analysis for commercial Android Java applications, of sizes in the tens of millions of
LoC, under active development at Facebook. The analysis runs
primarily at code-review time, on only the modified code and
its dependents; we aim at reporting to developers in under 15
minutes.
To detect deadlocks in this setting, we first model the real
language as an abstract language with balanced re-entrant locks,
nondeterministic iteration and branching, and non-recursive
procedure calls. We show that the existence of a deadlock in this
abstract language is equivalent to a certain condition over the
sets of critical pairs of each program thread; these record, for all
possible executions of the thread, which locks are currently held
at the point when a fresh lock is acquired. Since the critical pairs
of any program thread is finite and computable, the deadlock
detection problem for our language is decidable, and in NP.
We then leverage these results to develop an open-source
implementation of our analysis adapted to deal with real Java
code. The core of the implementation is an algorithm which
computes critical pairs in a compositional, abstract interpretation
style, running in quasi-exponential time. Our analyser is built in
the INFER verification framework and has been in industrial
deployment for over two years; it has seen over two hundred
fixed deadlock reports with a report fix rate of ∼54%
Static deadlock detection for concurrent go by global session graph synthesis
© 2016 ACM.Go is a programming language developed at Google, with channelbased concurrent features based on CSP. Go can detect global communication deadlocks at runtime when all threads of execution are blocked, but deadlocks in other paths of execution could be undetected. We present a new static analyser for concurrent Go code to find potential communication errors such as communication mismatch and deadlocks at compile time. Our tool extracts the communication operations as session types, which are then converted into Communicating Finite State Machines (CFSMs). Finally, we apply a recent theoretical result on choreography synthesis to generate a global graph representing the overall communication pattern of a concurrent program. If the synthesis is successful, then the program is free from communication errors. We have implemented the technique in a tool, and applied it to analyse common Go concurrency patterns and an open source application with over 700 lines of code
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