130 research outputs found

    Application of process algebraic verification and reduction techniques to SystemC designs

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    SystemC is an IEEE standard system-level language used in hardware/software codesign and has been widely adopted in the industry. This paper describes a formal approach to verifying SystemC designs by providing a mapping to the process algebra mCRL2. Our mapping formalizes both the simulation semantics as well as exhaustive state-space exploration of SystemC designs. By exploiting the existing reduction techniques of mCRL2 and also its model-checking tools, we efficiently locate the race conditions in a system and resolve them. A tool is implemented to automatically perform the proposed mapping. This mapping and the implemented tool enabled us to exploit process-algebraic verification techniques to analyze a number of case-studies, including the formal analysis of a single-cycle and a pipelined MIPS processor specified in SystemC.

    Specification, simulation, and verification of component connectors in Reo

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    Coordination and composition of components is an essential concern in component-based software engineering. In this paper, we present an operational semantics for a component composition language called Reo. Reo connectors exogenously compose and coordinate the interactions among individual components, that unawarely comprise a complex system, into a coherent collaboration. The formal semantics we present here paves the way for studying the behavior of component composition mechanisms rigorously. To demonstrate the feasibility of such a rigorous approach, we give a faithful translation of Reo semantics into the Maude term rewriting language. This translation allows us to exploit the rewriting engine and the modelchecking module in the Maude tool-set to symbolically run and model-check the behavior of Reo connectors

    Modelling and Simulation of Asynchronous Real-Time Systems using Timed Rebeca

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    In this paper we propose an extension of the Rebeca language that can be used to model distributed and asynchronous systems with timing constraints. We provide the formal semantics of the language using Structural Operational Semantics, and show its expressiveness by means of examples. We developed a tool for automated translation from timed Rebeca to the Erlang language, which provides a first implementation of timed Rebeca. We can use the tool to set the parameters of timed Rebeca models, which represent the environment and component variables, and use McErlang to run multiple simulations for different settings. Timed Rebeca restricts the modeller to a pure asynchronous actor-based paradigm, where the structure of the model represents the service oriented architecture, while the computational model matches the network infrastructure. Simulation is shown to be an effective analysis support, specially where model checking faces almost immediate state explosion in an asynchronous setting.Comment: In Proceedings FOCLASA 2011, arXiv:1107.584

    Modeling component connectors in Reo by constraint automata

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    Reo is an exogenous coordination language for compositional construction of component connectors based on a calculus of channels. Building automated tools to address such concerns as equivalence or containment of the behavior of two given connectors, verification of the behavior of a connector, etc. requires an operational semantic model suitable for model checking. In this paper we introduce constraint automata and propose them as a semantic model for Reo

    Modeling component connectors in Reo by constraint automata

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    Reo is an exogenous coordination language for compositional construction of component connectors based on a calculus of channels. Building automated tools to address such concerns as equivalence or containment of the behavior of two given connectors, verification of the behavior of a connector, etc. requires an operational semantic model suitable for model checking. In this paper we introduce constraint automata and propose them as a semantic model for Reo

    Extending Rebeca with synchronous messages and reusable components

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    In this paper, we propose extended Rebeca as a tool-supported actor-based language for modeling and verifying of concurrent and distributed systems. We enrich Rebeca with a formal concept of components which integrates the message-driven computational model of actor-based languages with synchronous message passing. Components are used to encapsulate a set of internal active objects which react asynchronously to messages by means of methods and which additionally interact via a synchronous message passing mechanism. Components themselves interact only via asynchronous and anonymous messages. We present our compositional verification approach and abstraction techniques, and the theory corresponding to it, based on formal semantics of Rebeca. These techniques are exploited to overcome state explosion problem in model checkin

    Symmetry and partial order reduction techniques in model checking Rebeca

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    Rebeca is an actor-based language with formal semantics that can be used in modeling concurrent and distributed software and protocols. In this paper, we study the application of partial order and symmetry reduction techniques to model checking dynamic Rebeca models. Finding symmetry based equivalence classes of states is in general a difficult problem known to be as hard as graph isomorphism. We show how, for Rebeca models, we can tackle this problem with a polynomial-time solution. Moreover, the coarse-grained interleaving semantics of Rebeca causes considerable reductions when partial order reduction is applied. We have also developed a tool that can make use of both techniques in combination or separately. The evaluation results show significant improvements in model size and model-checking time

    Formalizing Adaptation On-the-Fly

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    AbstractParadigm models specify coordination of collaborating components via constraint control. Component McPal allows for later addition of new constraints and new control in view of unforeseen adaptation. After addition McPal starts coordinating migration accordingly, adapting the system towards to-be collaboration. Once done, McPal removes obsolete control and constraints. All coordination remains ongoing while migrating on-the-fly, being deflected without any quiescence. Through translation into process algebra, supporting formal analysis is arranged carefully, showing that as-is and to-be processes are proper abstractions of the migrating process. A canonical critical section problem illustrates the approach
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