Authors: Hana Chockler, Shibashis Guha and Orna Kupferman
Paper Information
Title: | Timed Vacuity |
Authors: | Hana Chockler, Shibashis Guha and Orna Kupferman |
Proceedings: | FM FMComplete |
Editors: | Jan Peleska, Klaus Havelund and Bill Roscoe |
Keywords: | vacuity, real-time logic TCTL, complexity, model-checking |
Abstract: | ABSTRACT. Vacuity is a leading sanity check in model-checking, applied when the system is found to satisfy the specification. The check detects situations where the specification passes in a trivial way, say when a specification that requires every request to be followed by a grant is satisfied in a system with no requests. Such situations typically reveal serious problems in the modelling of the system or the specification, and indeed vacuity detection is a part of most industrial model-checking tools. Existing research and tools for vacuity concern discrete-time systems and specification formalisms. We introduce real-time vacuity, which aims to detect problems with real-time modelling. Real-time logics are used for the specification and verification of systems with a continuous-time behavior. We study vacuity for the branching real-time logic TCTL, and focus on vacuity with respect to the time constraints in the specification. Specifically, the logic TCTL includes a single temporal operator U^J, which specifies real-time eventualities in real-time systems: the parameter J ⊆ IR≥0 is an interval with integral boundaries that bounds the time in which the eventuality should hold. We define several tightenings for the U^J operator. These tightenings require the eventuality to hold within a strict subset of J. We prove that vacuity detection for TCTL is PSPACE-complete, thus it does not increase the complexity of model-checking of TCTL. Our contribution involves an extension, termed TCTL+, of TCTL, which allows the interval J not to be continuous, and for which model-checking stays in PSPACE. Finally, we discuss ways to rank vacuity results by their significance, and extend the framework of ranking vacuity to TCTL. |
Pages: | 18 |
Talk: | Jul 16 17:30 (Session 115C) |
Paper: |