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sav07_lecture_3_skeleton [2007/03/18 19:53]
vkuncak
sav07_lecture_3_skeleton [2007/03/20 14:28]
vkuncak
Line 1: Line 1:
 +====== Lecture 3 (Skeleton) ======
 +
 +==== Context ====
 +
 +Recall that we can
 +  * represent programs using guarded command language, e.g. desugaring of '​if'​ into non-deterministic choice and assume
 +  * give meaning to guarded command language statements as relations
 +  * we can represent relations using set comprehensions;​ if our program r has two state components, we can represent its meaning R(r) as
 +<​latex>​
 +\{((x_0,​y_0),​(x,​y)) \mid F \}
 +</​latex> ​     ​
 +    where F is some formula that has x,y,x_0,y_0 as free variables.
 +
 +Our goal is to find rules for computing R(r) that are
 +  * correct
 +  * efficient
 +  * create formulas that we can prove later
 +
 +
 +==== Formulas for basic statements ====
 +
 +In our simple language, basic statements are assignment, havoc, assume, assert.
 +
 +R(x=t) = (x=t & y=y_0 & error=error_0)
 +
 +**Note**: all our statements will have the property that if error_0 = true, then error=true. ​ That is, you can never recover from an error state. ​ This is convenient: if we prove no errors at the end, then there were never errors in between.
 +
 +**Note**: the condition y=y_0 & error=error_0 is called <​b>​frame condition</​b>​. ​ There are as many conjuncts as there are components of the state. ​ This can be annoying to write, so let us use shorthand frame(x) for it.  The shorthand frame(x) denotes a conjunction of v=v_0 for all v that are distinct from x (in this case y and error). ​ We can have zero or more variables as arguments of frame, so frame() means that nothing changes.
 +
 +R(havoc x) = frame(x)
 +R(assume F) = F[x:=x_0, y:=y_0, error:​=error_0]
 +R(assert F) = (F -> frame)
 +
 +**Note**:
 +
 +x=t  is same as  havoc(x);​assume(x=t)
 +
 +assert false = crash  (stops with error)
 +assume true  = skip   (does nothing)
  
 ==== Papers ==== ==== Papers ====
  
-  * Compact verification conditions using weakest preconditions: http://​research.microsoft.com/​~leino/​papers/​krml157.pdf+  * Verification condition generation in Spec#: http://​research.microsoft.com/​~leino/​papers/​krml157.pdf 
 +  * Loop invariant inference for set algebra formulas: {{hob-tcs.pdf}} 
 +  * Induction-iteration method for machine code checking: http://​www.cs.wisc.edu/​wpis/​papers/​pldi00.ps 
   * Presburger Arithmetic (PA) bounds: {{papadimitriou81complexityintegerprogramming.pdf}}   * Presburger Arithmetic (PA) bounds: {{papadimitriou81complexityintegerprogramming.pdf}}
   * Specializing PA bounds: http://​www.lmcs-online.org/​ojs/​viewarticle.php?​id=43&​layout=abstract   * Specializing PA bounds: http://​www.lmcs-online.org/​ojs/​viewarticle.php?​id=43&​layout=abstract