85 research outputs found

    Basic completion strategies as another application of the Maude strategy language

    Full text link
    The two levels of data and actions on those data provided by the separation between equations and rules in rewriting logic are completed by a third level of strategies to control the application of those actions. This level is implemented on top of Maude as a strategy language, which has been successfully used in a wide range of applications. First we summarize the Maude strategy language design and review some of its applications; then, we describe a new case study, namely the description of completion procedures as transition rules + control, as proposed by Lescanne.Comment: In Proceedings WRS 2011, arXiv:1204.531

    Programming and symbolic computation in Maude

    Full text link
    [EN] Rewriting logic is both a flexible semantic framework within which widely different concurrent systems can be naturally specified and a logical framework in which widely different logics can be specified. Maude programs are exactly rewrite theories. Maude has also a formal environment of verification tools. Symbolic computation is a powerful technique for reasoning about the correctness of concurrent systems and for increasing the power of formal tools. We present several new symbolic features of Maude that enhance formal reasoning about Maude programs and the effectiveness of formal tools. They include: (i) very general unification modulo user-definable equational theories, and (ii) symbolic reachability analysis of concurrent systems using narrowing. The paper does not focus just on symbolic features: it also describes several other new Maude features, including: (iii) Maude's strategy language for controlling rewriting, and (iv) external objects that allow flexible interaction of Maude object-based concurrent systems with the external world. In particular, meta-interpreters are external objects encapsulating Maude interpreters that can interact with many other objects. To make the paper self-contained and give a reasonably complete language overview, we also review the basic Maude features for equational rewriting and rewriting with rules, Maude programming of concurrent object systems, and reflection. Furthermore, we include many examples illustrating all the Maude notions and features described in the paper.Duran has been partially supported by MINECO/FEDER project TIN2014-52034-R. Escobar has been partially supported by the EU (FEDER) and the MCIU under grant RTI2018-094403-B-C32, by the Spanish Generalitat Valenciana under grant PROMETE0/2019/098, and by the US Air Force Office of Scientific Research under award number FA9550-17-1-0286. MartiOliet and Rubio have been partially supported by MCIU Spanish project TRACES (TIN2015-67522-C3-3-R). Rubio has also been partially supported by a MCIU grant FPU17/02319. Meseguer and Talcott have been partially supported by NRL Grant N00173 -17-1-G002. Talcott has also been partially supported by ONR Grant N00014-15-1-2202.Durán, F.; Eker, S.; Escobar Román, S.; NARCISO MARTÍ OLIET; José Meseguer; Rubén Rubio; Talcott, C. (2020). Programming and symbolic computation in Maude. Journal of Logical and Algebraic Methods in Programming. 110:1-58. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jlamp.2019.100497S158110Alpuente, M., Escobar, S., Espert, J., & Meseguer, J. (2014). A modular order-sorted equational generalization algorithm. Information and Computation, 235, 98-136. doi:10.1016/j.ic.2014.01.006K. Bae, J. Meseguer, Predicate abstraction of rewrite theories, in: [36], 2014, pp. 61–76.Bae, K., & Meseguer, J. (2015). Model checking linear temporal logic of rewriting formulas under localized fairness. Science of Computer Programming, 99, 193-234. doi:10.1016/j.scico.2014.02.006Bae, K., Meseguer, J., & Ölveczky, P. C. (2014). Formal patterns for multirate distributed real-time systems. Science of Computer Programming, 91, 3-44. doi:10.1016/j.scico.2013.09.010P. Borovanský, C. Kirchner, H. Kirchner, P.E. Moreau, C. Ringeissen, An overview of ELAN, in: [77], 1998, pp. 55–70.Bouhoula, A., Jouannaud, J.-P., & Meseguer, J. (2000). Specification and proof in membership equational logic. Theoretical Computer Science, 236(1-2), 35-132. doi:10.1016/s0304-3975(99)00206-6Bravenboer, M., Kalleberg, K. T., Vermaas, R., & Visser, E. (2008). Stratego/XT 0.17. A language and toolset for program transformation. Science of Computer Programming, 72(1-2), 52-70. doi:10.1016/j.scico.2007.11.003Bruni, R., & Meseguer, J. (2006). Semantic foundations for generalized rewrite theories. Theoretical Computer Science, 360(1-3), 386-414. doi:10.1016/j.tcs.2006.04.012M. Clavel, F. Durán, S. Eker, S. Escobar, P. Lincoln, N. Martí-Oliet, C.L. Talcott, Two decades of Maude, in: [86], 2015, pp. 232–254.Clavel, M., Durán, F., Eker, S., Lincoln, P., Martı́-Oliet, N., Meseguer, J., & Quesada, J. F. (2002). Maude: specification and programming in rewriting logic. Theoretical Computer Science, 285(2), 187-243. doi:10.1016/s0304-3975(01)00359-0Clavel, M., & Meseguer, J. (2002). Reflection in conditional rewriting logic. Theoretical Computer Science, 285(2), 245-288. doi:10.1016/s0304-3975(01)00360-7F. Durán, S. Eker, S. Escobar, N. Martí-Oliet, J. Meseguer, C.L. Talcott, Associative unification and symbolic reasoning modulo associativity in Maude, in: [121], 2018, pp. 98–114.Durán, F., Lucas, S., Marché, C., Meseguer, J., & Urbain, X. (2008). Proving operational termination of membership equational programs. Higher-Order and Symbolic Computation, 21(1-2), 59-88. doi:10.1007/s10990-008-9028-2F. Durán, J. Meseguer, An extensible module algebra for Maude, in: [77], 1998, pp. 174–195.Durán, F., & Meseguer, J. (2003). Structured theories and institutions. Theoretical Computer Science, 309(1-3), 357-380. doi:10.1016/s0304-3975(03)00312-8Durán, F., & Meseguer, J. (2007). Maude’s module algebra. Science of Computer Programming, 66(2), 125-153. doi:10.1016/j.scico.2006.07.002Durán, F., & Meseguer, J. (2012). On the Church-Rosser and coherence properties of conditional order-sorted rewrite theories. The Journal of Logic and Algebraic Programming, 81(7-8), 816-850. doi:10.1016/j.jlap.2011.12.004F. Durán, P.C. Ölveczky, A guide to extending Full Maude illustrated with the implementation of Real-Time Maude, in: [116], 2009, pp. 83–102.S. Escobar, Multi-paradigm programming in Maude, in: [121], 2018, pp. 26–44.Escobar, S., Meadows, C., Meseguer, J., & Santiago, S. (2014). State space reduction in the Maude-NRL Protocol Analyzer. Information and Computation, 238, 157-186. doi:10.1016/j.ic.2014.07.007Escobar, S., Sasse, R., & Meseguer, J. (2012). Folding variant narrowing and optimal variant termination. The Journal of Logic and Algebraic Programming, 81(7-8), 898-928. doi:10.1016/j.jlap.2012.01.002H. Garavel, M. Tabikh, I. Arrada, Benchmarking implementations of term rewriting and pattern matching in algebraic, functional, and object-oriented languages – the 4th rewrite engines competition, in: [121], 2018, pp. 1–25.Goguen, J. A., & Burstall, R. M. (1992). Institutions: abstract model theory for specification and programming. Journal of the ACM, 39(1), 95-146. doi:10.1145/147508.147524Goguen, J. A., & Meseguer, J. (1984). Equality, types, modules, and (why not?) generics for logic programming. The Journal of Logic Programming, 1(2), 179-210. doi:10.1016/0743-1066(84)90004-9Goguen, J. A., & Meseguer, J. (1992). Order-sorted algebra I: equational deduction for multiple inheritance, overloading, exceptions and partial operations. Theoretical Computer Science, 105(2), 217-273. doi:10.1016/0304-3975(92)90302-vR. Gutiérrez, J. Meseguer, Variant-based decidable satisfiability in initial algebras with predicates, in: [61], 2018, pp. 306–322.Gutiérrez, R., Meseguer, J., & Rocha, C. (2015). Order-sorted equality enrichments modulo axioms. Science of Computer Programming, 99, 235-261. doi:10.1016/j.scico.2014.07.003Horn, A. (1951). On sentences which are true of direct unions of algebras. Journal of Symbolic Logic, 16(1), 14-21. doi:10.2307/2268661Katelman, M., Keller, S., & Meseguer, J. (2012). Rewriting semantics of production rule sets. The Journal of Logic and Algebraic Programming, 81(7-8), 929-956. doi:10.1016/j.jlap.2012.06.002Kowalski, R. (1979). Algorithm = logic + control. Communications of the ACM, 22(7), 424-436. doi:10.1145/359131.359136Lucanu, D., Rusu, V., & Arusoaie, A. (2017). A generic framework for symbolic execution: A coinductive approach. Journal of Symbolic Computation, 80, 125-163. doi:10.1016/j.jsc.2016.07.012D. Lucanu, V. Rusu, A. Arusoaie, D. Nowak, Verifying reachability-logic properties on rewriting-logic specifications, in: [86], 2015, pp. 451–474.Lucas, S., & Meseguer, J. (2016). Normal forms and normal theories in conditional rewriting. Journal of Logical and Algebraic Methods in Programming, 85(1), 67-97. doi:10.1016/j.jlamp.2015.06.001N. Martí-Oliet, J. Meseguer, A. Verdejo, A rewriting semantics for Maude strategies, in: [116], 2009, pp. 227–247.Martí-Oliet, N., Palomino, M., & Verdejo, A. (2007). Strategies and simulations in a semantic framework. Journal of Algorithms, 62(3-4), 95-116. doi:10.1016/j.jalgor.2007.04.002Meseguer, J. (1992). Conditional rewriting logic as a unified model of concurrency. Theoretical Computer Science, 96(1), 73-155. doi:10.1016/0304-3975(92)90182-fMeseguer, J. (2012). Twenty years of rewriting logic. The Journal of Logic and Algebraic Programming, 81(7-8), 721-781. doi:10.1016/j.jlap.2012.06.003Meseguer, J. (2017). Strict coherence of conditional rewriting modulo axioms. Theoretical Computer Science, 672, 1-35. doi:10.1016/j.tcs.2016.12.026J. Meseguer, Generalized rewrite theories and coherence completion, in: [121], 2018, pp. 164–183.Meseguer, J. (2018). Variant-based satisfiability in initial algebras. Science of Computer Programming, 154, 3-41. doi:10.1016/j.scico.2017.09.001Meseguer, J., Goguen, J. A., & Smolka, G. (1989). Order-sorted unification. Journal of Symbolic Computation, 8(4), 383-413. doi:10.1016/s0747-7171(89)80036-7Meseguer, J., & Ölveczky, P. C. (2012). Formalization and correctness of the PALS architectural pattern for distributed real-time systems. Theoretical Computer Science, 451, 1-37. doi:10.1016/j.tcs.2012.05.040Meseguer, J., Palomino, M., & Martí-Oliet, N. (2008). Equational abstractions. Theoretical Computer Science, 403(2-3), 239-264. doi:10.1016/j.tcs.2008.04.040Meseguer, J., & Roşu, G. (2007). The rewriting logic semantics project. Theoretical Computer Science, 373(3), 213-237. doi:10.1016/j.tcs.2006.12.018Meseguer, J., & Roşu, G. (2013). The rewriting logic semantics project: A progress report. Information and Computation, 231, 38-69. doi:10.1016/j.ic.2013.08.004Meseguer, J., & Skeirik, S. (2017). Equational formulas and pattern operations in initial order-sorted algebras. Formal Aspects of Computing, 29(3), 423-452. doi:10.1007/s00165-017-0415-5Meseguer, J., & Thati, P. (2007). Symbolic reachability analysis using narrowing and its application to verification of cryptographic protocols. Higher-Order and Symbolic Computation, 20(1-2), 123-160. doi:10.1007/s10990-007-9000-6C. Olarte, E. Pimentel, C. Rocha, Proving structural properties of sequent systems in rewriting logic, in: [121], 2018, pp. 115–135.Ölveczky, P. C., & Meseguer, J. (2007). Semantics and pragmatics of Real-Time Maude. Higher-Order and Symbolic Computation, 20(1-2), 161-196. doi:10.1007/s10990-007-9001-5Ölveczky, P. C., & Thorvaldsen, S. (2009). Formal modeling, performance estimation, and model checking of wireless sensor network algorithms in Real-Time Maude. Theoretical Computer Science, 410(2-3), 254-280. doi:10.1016/j.tcs.2008.09.022Rocha, C., Meseguer, J., & Muñoz, C. (2017). Rewriting modulo SMT and open system analysis. Journal of Logical and Algebraic Methods in Programming, 86(1), 269-297. doi:10.1016/j.jlamp.2016.10.001Şerbănuţă, T. F., Roşu, G., & Meseguer, J. (2009). A rewriting logic approach to operational semantics. Information and Computation, 207(2), 305-340. doi:10.1016/j.ic.2008.03.026Skeirik, S., & Meseguer, J. (2018). Metalevel algorithms for variant satisfiability. Journal of Logical and Algebraic Methods in Programming, 96, 81-110. doi:10.1016/j.jlamp.2017.12.006S. Skeirik, A. Ştefănescu, J. Meseguer, A constructor-based reachability logic for rewrite theories, in: [61], 2018, pp. 201–217.Strachey, C. (2000). Higher-Order and Symbolic Computation, 13(1/2), 11-49. doi:10.1023/a:1010000313106A. Ştefănescu, S. Ciobâcă, R. Mereuta, B.M. Moore, T. Serbanuta, G. Roşu, All-path reachability logic, in: [36], 2014, pp. 425–440.Tushkanova, E., Giorgetti, A., Ringeissen, C., & Kouchnarenko, O. (2015). A rule-based system for automatic decidability and combinability. Science of Computer Programming, 99, 3-23. doi:10.1016/j.scico.2014.02.00

    Model checking strategy-controlled rewriting systems (extended version)

    Get PDF
    Strategies are widespread in Computer Science. In the domain of reduction and rewriting systems, strategies are studied as recipes to restrict and control reduction steps and rule applications, which are intimately local, in a derivation-global sense. This idea has been exploited by various tools and rewriting-based specification languages, where strategies are an additional specification layer. Systems so described need to be analyzed too. This article discusses model checking of systems controlled by strategies and presents a working strategy-aware LTL model checker for the Maude specification language, based on rewriting logic, and its strategy language. This extended version includes the proofs of the propositions in the conference paper, and a complete description of the small-step operational semantics used to define model checking for the Maude strategy language

    Bridging formal models : an engineering perspective

    Get PDF
    The thesis presents different techniques that can be used to build formal behavioral models. If modal properties are formulated, the models can be subjected to verification techniques to determine whether a model possesses the desired properties. However many native environments do not facilitate tools or techniques to verify them. Hence, these models need to be transformed into other models that provide suitable techniques for a formal analysis. The transformations are classified into two engineering approaches, namely syntactically engineered models and semantically engineered models. Syntactically engineered models are constructed from input specifications without explicitly considering the semantics. Semantically engineered models are constructed from input specifications by explicitly considering the semantics. The syntactic engineering approach presents four dedicated modeling techniques that construct or disseminate verification results for formal models. The first modeling technique describes a way to create models from system descriptions that specify concurrent behavior. Here, we model three variations of a 2×2 switch, for which the models are subsequently compared to models created in the specification languages: TLA+, Bluespec, Statecharts, and ACP. The comparison validates that mCRL2 is a suitable specification language to model descriptions or specify the behavior for prototype systems. The second syntactic technique constructs an mCRL2 model from a software implementation that operates a printer for printing Printed Circuit Boards. The model is used to advise (other) software engineers on dangerous language constructs in the control software. Hence, the model is model checked for various safety properties. The implementation is modeled through an over-approximation on the behavior by abstracting from program variables, such that only interface calls between processes and non-deterministic choices in procedures remain. The third modeling technique describes a language transformation from the language Chi 2.0 language to the mCRL2 language. The purpose of the transformation is to facilitate model checking techniques to the discrete part of the Chi 2.0 language

    Not lost in translation: translators’ agency in promoting attitudinal change : the example of Las Malas by Camila Sosa Villada (2019) and its translation into English, French, and German

    Get PDF
    Die vorliegende Arbeit ist das Ergebnis einer Analyse eines aktivistischen Romans, Las Malas, der von einer argentinischen Trans-Autorin geschrieben wurde, um das gesellschaftliche Bewusstsein für die Demütigung und Marginalisierung, in der die Trans-Gemeinschaft lebt, zu sensibilisieren, sowie von drei Übersetzungen des Romans. Um herauszufinden, inwieweit professionelle Übersetzer:innen ihre Handlungsfähigkeit ausüben und ihre Rolle als Ermöglicher des sozialen Wandels in ihrer jeweiligen Sprachkultur anerkennen, wurden einige kulturell und emotional geladene Auszüge aus dem Originaltext von einer Gruppe von zehn Leser:innen ausgewählt, die der Autorin nicht bekannt sind. Diese emotional geladenen Auszüge wurden anschliessend mit den Personen diskutiert, die Las Malas ins Englische, Deutsche und Französische übersetzt haben. Als konzeptueller Rahmen für die Textanalyse dienten die kontrastive Grammatik, die Diskursanalyse, des Qualitätsbewertungsmodells von Juliane House und der Normen von Gideon Toury. Die Untersuchung des Verhältnisses zwischen diesen Übersetzungen und den sozioökonomischen Bedingungen der Kultur des Ausgangstextes ergab, dass die hervorstechenden aktivistischen Inhalte meist so übersetzt wurden, dass sie die gleiche oder zumindest eine ähnliche Wirkung auf das Zielpublikum ausübten. Obwohl einige geografische, soziale, historische oder kulturelle Bezüge in den Zieltexten verloren gingen, beeinträchtigte dies weder das Verständnis der übersetzten Texte, noch schmälerte es das berufliche Selbstkonzept der Übersetzer:innen und ihre Selbstwahrnehmung als Vermittler zwischen den Sprachkulturen. Somit stützen die bisherigen Ergebnisse die Hypothese, dass Übersetzer:innen, bedingt durch die soziokulturellen Verhältnisse des LGBTQ+-Kollektivs in Argentinien, das Potenzial haben, eine entscheidende Rolle bei der gesellschaftlichen Anerkennung von travestis zu spielen, und ihnen zu helfen, eine Stimme zu finden und ihre weibliche Identität neu zu definieren, um so einen Wandel in der Haltung gegenüber dieser marginalisierten Gruppe zu fördern. The present thesis is the result of an analysis of an activist novel, Las Malas, written by an Argentinian transvestite author seeking to raise social awareness about the indignity and marginalization in which the trans community lives, and three of the novel’s translations. In order to discover to what extent the professional translators exert their agency and acknowledge their role as enablers of social change in their respective linguacultures, cultural and emotionally laden points were selected from the original text by a group of ten readers unknown to the author of this thesis. These rich points are discussed with the professional translators – working respectively into English, German and French - of Las Malas. The results are analyzed using contrastive grammar, discourse analysis, Juliane House’s quality assessment model and Gideon Toury’s norms as a conceptual framework. Studying the relationship between these translations and the socio-economic conditions of the source text’s (ST) culture reveal that the salient activist rich points have mostly been translated in a way that conveyed the same or at least a similar impact on its target readers. Although certain geographical, social, historical or cultural references were lost in the target texts (TT), this neither hindered the understanding of the translated texts nor did it belittle the translators’ professional self-concept and their self-perception as mediators across linguacultures. The findings so far therefore support the hypothesis that, induced by the sociocultural conditions of the LGBTQ+ collective in Argentina, translators have demonstrated the potential to play a critical role in making travestis socially acknowledged, help them to find a voice, and redefine their female identity in an effort to promote a change in attitudes towards this marginalized group

    Exploring Transient Identities: Deconstructing Depictions Of Gender And Imperial Ideology In The Oriental Travel Narratives Of Englishwomen, 1831-1915

    Get PDF
    Englishwomen who traveled to the Orient in the Victorian era constructed an identity that was British in its bravery, middle-class in its refinement, feminine in appearance and speech and Christian in its intolerance of Oriental heathenism. Studying Victorian female travel narratives that described journeys to the Orient provides an excellent opportunity to reexamine the diaphanous nature of the boundaries of the public/private sphere dichotomy; the relationship between travel, overt nationalism, and gendered constructions of identity, the link between geographic location and self-definition; the power dynamics inherent in information gathering, organization and production. Englishwomen projected gendered identities in their writings, which were both imperially masculine and domestically feminine, depending on the needs of a particular location and space. The travel narrative itself was also a gendered product that served as both a medium of cultural expression for Victorian women and a tool of restraint, encouraging them to conform to societal expectations to gain limited authority and recognition for their travels even while they embraced the freedom of movement. The terms imperial masculinity and domestic femininity are employed throughout this analysis to categorize the transient manipulation of character traits associated in Victorian society with middle- and upper-class men abroad in the empire and middle- and upper-class women who remained within their homes in Great Britain. Also stressed is the decision by female travelers to co-assert feminine identities that legitimated their imperial freedom by alluding to equally important components of their transported domestic constructions of self. Contrary to scholarship solely viewing Victorian projections of the feminine ideal as negative, the powers underlining social determinants of gender norms will be treated as both regulatory and productive. Englishwomen chose to amplify elements of their domestic femininity or newly obtained imperial masculinity depending on the situation encountered during their travels or the message they wished to communicate in their travel narratives. The travel narrative is a valuable tool not only for deconstructing transient constructions of gender, but also for discovering the foundations of race and class ideologies in which the Oriental and the Orient are subjugated to enhance Englishwomen\u27s Orientalist imperial status and position. This thesis is modeled on the structure of the traveling experience. In reviewing first the intellectual expectations preceding travel, the events of travel and finally the emotional reaction to the first two, a metaphoric attempt to better understand meaning through mimicry has been made. Over twenty travel narratives published by Englishwomen of varying social backgrounds, economic classes and motivations for travel between 1830 and World War I were analyzed in conjunction with letters, diaries, fictional works, newspaper articles, advice manuals, travel guides and religious texts in an effort to study the uniquely gendered nature of the Preface in female travel narratives; definitions of travelers and traveling; the manner in which new forms of metaphysical identification formulated what Victorian lady travelers pre-knew the East to be; the gendered nature in which female travelers portrayed their encounters with the realities of travel; and the concept of disconnect, or the distance between a female traveler\u27s expectation and the portrayed reality of what she experienced in the Orient

    O Corpo do Brasil: The Role of the Brazilian Body in the Art of Ernesto Neto

    Get PDF

    NASA SBIR abstracts of 1991 phase 1 projects

    Get PDF
    The objectives of 301 projects placed under contract by the Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) program of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) are described. These projects were selected competitively from among proposals submitted to NASA in response to the 1991 SBIR Program Solicitation. The basic document consists of edited, non-proprietary abstracts of the winning proposals submitted by small businesses. The abstracts are presented under the 15 technical topics within which Phase 1 proposals were solicited. Each project was assigned a sequential identifying number from 001 to 301, in order of its appearance in the body of the report. Appendixes to provide additional information about the SBIR program and permit cross-reference of the 1991 Phase 1 projects by company name, location by state, principal investigator, NASA Field Center responsible for management of each project, and NASA contract number are included
    corecore