172 research outputs found

    Deterministic Timed Finite State Machines: Equivalence Checking and Expressive Power

    Full text link
    There has been a growing interest in defining models of automata enriched with time. For instance, timed automata were introduced as automata extended with clocks. In this paper, we study models of timed finite state machines (TFSMs), i.e., FSMs enriched with time, which accept timed input words and generate timed output words. Here we discuss some models of TFSMs with a single clock: TFSMs with timed guards, TFSMs with timeouts, and TFSMs with both timed guards and timeouts. We solve the problem of equivalence checking for all three models, and we compare their expressive power, characterizing subclasses of TFSMs with timed guards and of TFSMs with timeouts that are equivalent to each other.Comment: In Proceedings GandALF 2014, arXiv:1408.556

    Decomposition of sequential and concurrent models

    Get PDF
    Le macchine a stati finiti (FSM), sistemi di transizioni (TS) e le reti di Petri (PN) sono importanti modelli formali per la progettazione di sistemi. Un problema fodamentale è la conversione da un modello all'altro. Questa tesi esplora il mondo delle reti di Petri e della decomposizione di sistemi di transizioni. Per quanto riguarda la decomposizione dei sistemi di transizioni, la teoria delle regioni rappresenta la colonna portante dell'intero processo di decomposizione, mirato soprattutto a decomposizioni che utilizzano due sottoclassi delle reti di Petri: macchine a stati e reti di Petri a scelta libera. Nella tesi si dimostra che una proprietà chiamata ``chiusura rispetto all'eccitazione" (excitation-closure) è sufficiente per produrre un insieme di reti di Petri la cui sincronizzazione è bisimile al sistema di transizioni (o rete di Petri di partenza, se la decomposizione parte da una rete di Petri), dimostrando costruttivamente l'esistenza di una bisimulazione. Inoltre, è stato implementato un software che esegue la decomposizione dei sistemi di transizioni, per rafforzare i risultati teorici con dati sperimentali sistematici. Nella seconda parte della dissertazione si analizza un nuovo modello chiamato MSFSM, che rappresenta un insieme di FSM sincronizzate da due primitive specifiche (Wait State - Stato d'Attesa e Transition Barrier - Barriera di Transizione). Tale modello trova un utilizzo significativo nella sintesi di circuiti sincroni a partire da reti di Petri a scelta libera. In particolare vengono identificati degli errori nell'approccio originale, fornendo delle correzioni.Finite State Machines (FSMs), transition systems (TSs) and Petri nets (PNs) are important models of computation ubiquitous in formal methods for modeling systems. Important problems involve the transition from one model to another. This thesis explores Petri nets, transition systems and Finite State Machines decomposition and optimization. The first part addresses decomposition of transition systems and Petri nets, based on the theory of regions, representing them by means of restricted PNs, e.g., State Machines (SMs) and Free-choice Petri nets (FCPNs). We show that the property called ``excitation-closure" is sufficient to produce a set of synchronized Petri nets bisimilar to the original transition system or to the initial Petri net (if the decomposition starts from a PN), proving by construction the existence of a bisimulation. Furthermore, we implemented a software performing the decomposition of transition systems, and reported extensive experiments. The second part of the dissertation discusses Multiple Synchronized Finite State Machines (MSFSMs) specifying a set of FSMs synchronized by specific primitives: Wait State and Transition Barrier. It introduces a method for converting Petri nets into synchronous circuits using MSFSM, identifies errors in the initial approach, and provides corrections

    Efficient Solution of Language Equations Using Partitioned Representations

    Full text link
    A class of discrete event synthesis problems can be reduced to solving language equations f . X ⊆ S, where F is the fixed component and S the specification. Sequential synthesis deals with FSMs when the automata for F and S are prefix closed, and are naturally represented by multi-level networks with latches. For this special case, we present an efficient computation, using partitioned representations, of the most general prefix-closed solution of the above class of language equations. The transition and the output relations of the FSMs for F and S in their partitioned form are represented by the sets of output and next state functions of the corresponding networks. Experimentally, we show that using partitioned representations is much faster than using monolithic representations, as well as applicable to larger problem instances.Comment: Submitted on behalf of EDAA (http://www.edaa.com/

    Mining Significant Temporal Networks Is Polynomial

    Get PDF
    A Conditional Simple Temporal Network with Uncertainty and Decisions (CSTNUD) is a formalism that tackles controllable and uncontrollable durations as well as controllable and uncontrollable choices simultaneously. In the classic top-down model-based engineering approach, a designer builds a CSTNUD to model, validate and execute some temporal plan of interest. Instead, in this paper, we investigate the bottom-up approach by providing a deterministic polynomial time algorithm to mine a CSTNUD from a set of execution traces (i.e., a log). This paper paves the way for the design of controllable temporal networks mined from traces that also contain information on uncontrollable events

    Decomposition of transition systems into sets of synchronizing state machines

    Get PDF
    Transition systems (TS) and Petri nets (PN) are important models of computation ubiquitous in formal methods for modeling systems. An important problem is how to extract from a given TS a PN whose reachability graph is equivalent (with a suitable notion of equivalence) to the original TS. This paper addresses the decomposition of transition systems into synchronizing state machines (SMs), which are a class of Petri nets where each transition has one incoming and one outgoing arc and all markings have exactly one token. This is an important case of the general problem of extracting a PN from a TS. The decomposition is based on the theory of regions, and it is shown that a property of regions called excitation-closure is a sufficient condition to guarantee the equivalence between the original TS and a decomposition into SMs. An efficient algorithm is provided which solves the problem by reducing its critical steps to the maximal independent set problem (to compute a minimal set of irredundant SMs) or to satisfiability (to merge the SMs). We report experimental results that show a good trade-off between quality of results vs. computation time. © 2021 IEEE.Peer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft

    Decomposition of transition systems into sets of synchronizing state machines

    Get PDF
    Transition systems (TS) and Petri nets (PN) are important models of computation ubiquitous in formal methods for modeling systems. An important problem is how to extract from a given TS a PN whose reachability graph is equivalent (with a suitable notion of equivalence) to the original TS. This paper addresses the decomposition of transition systems into synchronizing state machines (SMs), which are a class of Petri nets where each transition has one incoming and one outgoing arc and all markings have exactly one token. This is an important case of the general problem of extracting a PN from a TS. The decomposition is based on the theory of regions, and it is shown that a property of regions called excitation-closure is a sufficient condition to guarantee the equivalence between the original TS and a decomposition into SMs. An efficient algorithm is provided which solves the problem by reducing its critical steps to the maximal independent set problem (to compute a minimal set of irredundant SMs) or to satisfiability (to merge the SMs). We report experimental results that show a good trade-off between quality of results vs. computation time

    An FSM Re-Engineering Approach to Sequential Circuit Synthesis by State Splitting

    Get PDF
    We propose Finite State Machine (FSM) re-engineering, a performance enhancement framework for FSM synthesis and optimization. It starts with the traditional FSM synthesis procedure, then proceeds to re-construct a functionally equivalent but topologically different FSM based on the optimization objective, and concludes with another round of FSM synthesis on the re-constructed FSM. This approach explores a larger solution space that consists of a set of FSMs functionally equivalent to the original one, making it possible to obtain better solutions than in the original FSM. Guided by the result from the #2;rst round of synthesis, the solution space exploration process can be rapid and cost-ef#2;cient. We apply this framework to FSM state encoding for power minimization and area minimization. The FSM is #2;rst minimized and encoded using existing state encoding algorithms. Then we develop both a heuristic algorithm and a genetic algorithm to re-construct the FSM. Finally, the FSM is reencoded by the same encoding algorithms. To demonstrate the effectiveness of this framework, we conduct experiments on MCNC91 sequential circuit benchmarks. The circuits are read in and synthesized in SIS environment. After FSM re-engineering are performed, we measure the power, area and delay in the newly synthesized circuits. In the powerdriven synthesis, we observe an average 5.5% of total power reduction with 1.3% area increase and 1.3% delay increase. This results are in general better than other low power state encoding techniques on comparable cases. In the area-driven synthesis, we observe an average 2.7% area reduction, 1.8% delay reduction, and 0.4% power increase. Finally, we use integer linear programming to obtain the optimal low power state encoding for benchmarks of small size. We #2;nd that the optimal solutions in the re- engineered FSMs are 1% to 8% better than the optimal solutions in the original FSMs in terms of power minimization

    The quotient in preorder theories

    Get PDF
    Seeking the largest solution to an expression of the form Ax 64 B is a common task in several domains of engineering and computer science. This largest solution is commonly called quotient. Across domains, the meanings of the binary operation and the preorder are quite different, yet the syntax for computing the largest solution is remarkably similar. This paper is about finding a common framework to reason about quotients. We only assume we operate on a preorder endowed with an abstract monotonic multiplication and an involution. We provide a condition, called admissibility, which guarantees the existence of the quotient, and which yields its closed form. We call preordered heaps those structures satisfying the admissibility condition. We show that many existing theories in computer science are preordered heaps, and we are thus able to derive a quotient for them, subsuming existing solutions when available in the literature. We introduce the concept of sieved heaps to deal with structures which are given over multiple domains of definition. We show that sieved heaps also have well-defined quotients
    corecore