21 research outputs found
Precise Null Pointer Analysis Through Global Value Numbering
Precise analysis of pointer information plays an important role in many
static analysis techniques and tools today. The precision, however, must be
balanced against the scalability of the analysis. This paper focusses on
improving the precision of standard context and flow insensitive alias analysis
algorithms at a low scalability cost. In particular, we present a
semantics-preserving program transformation that drastically improves the
precision of existing analyses when deciding if a pointer can alias NULL. Our
program transformation is based on Global Value Numbering, a scheme inspired
from compiler optimizations literature. It allows even a flow-insensitive
analysis to make use of branch conditions such as checking if a pointer is NULL
and gain precision. We perform experiments on real-world code to measure the
overhead in performing the transformation and the improvement in the precision
of the analysis. We show that the precision improves from 86.56% to 98.05%,
while the overhead is insignificant.Comment: 17 pages, 1 section in Appendi
On Automated Lemma Generation for Separation Logic with Inductive Definitions
Separation Logic with inductive definitions is a well-known approach for
deductive verification of programs that manipulate dynamic data structures.
Deciding verification conditions in this context is usually based on
user-provided lemmas relating the inductive definitions. We propose a novel
approach for generating these lemmas automatically which is based on simple
syntactic criteria and deterministic strategies for applying them. Our approach
focuses on iterative programs, although it can be applied to recursive programs
as well, and specifications that describe not only the shape of the data
structures, but also their content or their size. Empirically, we find that our
approach is powerful enough to deal with sophisticated benchmarks, e.g.,
iterative procedures for searching, inserting, or deleting elements in sorted
lists, binary search tress, red-black trees, and AVL trees, in a very efficient
way
Engineering a static verification tool for GPU kernels
We report on practical experiences over the last 2.5 years related to the engineering of GPUVerify, a static verification tool for OpenCL and CUDA GPU kernels, plotting the progress of GPUVerify from a prototype to a fully functional and relatively efficient analysis tool. Our hope is that this experience report will serve the verification community by helping to inform future tooling efforts. © 2014 Springer International Publishing
Model Checking Boot Code from AWS Data Centers
This paper describes our experience with symbolic model checking in an industrial setting. We have proved that the initial boot code running in data centers at Amazon Web Services is memory safe, an essential step in establishing the security of any data center. Standard static analysis tools cannot be easily used on boot code without modification owing to issues not commonly found in higher-level code, including memory-mapped device interfaces, byte-level memory access, and linker scripts. This paper describes automated solutions to these issues and their implementation in the C Bounded Model Checker (CBMC). CBMC is now the first source-level static analysis tool to extract the memory layout described in a linker script for use in its analysis
On Deciding Local Theory Extensions via E-matching
Satisfiability Modulo Theories (SMT) solvers incorporate decision procedures
for theories of data types that commonly occur in software. This makes them
important tools for automating verification problems. A limitation frequently
encountered is that verification problems are often not fully expressible in
the theories supported natively by the solvers. Many solvers allow the
specification of application-specific theories as quantified axioms, but their
handling is incomplete outside of narrow special cases.
In this work, we show how SMT solvers can be used to obtain complete decision
procedures for local theory extensions, an important class of theories that are
decidable using finite instantiation of axioms. We present an algorithm that
uses E-matching to generate instances incrementally during the search,
significantly reducing the number of generated instances compared to eager
instantiation strategies. We have used two SMT solvers to implement this
algorithm and conducted an extensive experimental evaluation on benchmarks
derived from verification conditions for heap-manipulating programs. We believe
that our results are of interest to both the users of SMT solvers as well as
their developers
Decidable logics combining heap structures and data
We define a new logic, STRAND, that allows reasoning with heap-manipulating programs using deductive verification and SMT solvers. STRAND logic (“STRucture ANd Data” logic) formulas express constraints involving heap structures and the data they contain; they are defined over a class of pointer-structures R defined using MSO-defined relations over trees, and are of the form ?x?y.?(x, y), where ? is a monadic second-order logic (MSO) formula with additional quantification that combines structural constraints as well as data-constraints, but where the data-constraints are only allowed to refer to x and y. The salient aspects of the logic are: (a) the logic is powerful, allowing existential and universal quantification over the nodes, and complex combinations of data and structural constraints; (b) checking Hoare-triples for linear blocks of statements with pre-conditions and post-conditions expressed as Boolean combinations of existential and universal STRAND formulas reduces to satisfiability of a STRAND formula; (c) there are powerful decidable fragments of STRAND, one semantically defined and one syntactically defined, where the decision procedure works by combining the theory of MSO over trees and the quantifier-free theory of the underlying data-logic. We demonstrate the effectiveness and practicality of the logic by checking verification conditions generated in proving properties of several heap-manipulating programs, using a tool that combines an MSO decision procedure over trees (MONA) with an SMT solver for integer constraints (Z3)
Automated specification discovery via user-defined predicates
10.1007/978-3-642-41202-8_26Lecture Notes in Computer Science (including subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics)8144 LNCS397-41