Automated test generation based on symbolic execution can be beneficial for
systematically testing safety-critical software, to facilitate test engineers
to pursue the strict testing requirements mandated by the certification
standards, while controlling at the same time the costs of the testing process.
At the same time, the development of safety-critical software is often
constrained with programming languages or coding conventions that ban
linguistic features which are believed to downgrade the safety of the programs,
e.g., they do not allow dynamic memory allocation and variable-length arrays,
limit the way in which loops are used, forbid recursion, and bound the
complexity of control conditions. As a matter of facts, these linguistic
features are also the main efficiency-blockers for the test generation
approaches based on symbolic execution at the state of the art. This paper
contributes new evidence of the effectiveness of generating test cases with
symbolic execution for a significant class of industrial safety
critical-systems. We specifically focus on Scade, a largely adopted model-based
development language for safety-critical embedded software, and we report on a
case study in which we exploited symbolic execution to automatically generate
test cases for a set of safety-critical programs developed in Scade. To this
end, we introduce a novel test generator that we developed in a recent
industrial project on testing safety-critical railway software written in
Scade, and we report on our experience of using this test generator for testing
a set of Scade programs that belong to the development of an on-board signaling
unit for high-speed rail. The results provide empirically evidence that
symbolic execution is indeed a viable approach for generating high-quality test
suites for the safety-critical programs considered in our case study