Integrating Topological Proofs with Model Checking to Instrument Iterative Design

11/26/2018
by   Claudio Menghi, et al.
0

System development is not a linear, one-shot process. It proceeds through refinements and revisions. To support assurance that the system satisfies its requirements, it is desirable that continuous verification can be performed after each refinement or revision step. To achieve practical adoption, formal system modeling and verification must accommodate continuous verification efficiently and effectively. Our proposal to address this problem is TOrPEDO, a verification approach where models are given via Partial Kripke Structures (PKSs) and requirements are specified as Linear-time Temporal Logic (LTL) properties. PKSs support refinement, by deliberately indicating unspecified parts of the model that are later completed. We support verification in two complementary forms: via model checking and proofs. Model checking is useful to provide counterexamples, i.e., pinpoint model behaviors that violate requirements. Proofs are instead useful since they can explain why requirements are satisfied. In our work, we introduce a specific concept of proof, called topological proof (TP). A TP produces a slice of the original PKS which justifies the property satisfaction. Because models can be incomplete, TOrPEDO supports reasoning on requirements satisfaction, violation, and possible satisfaction (in the case where the satisfaction depends on unknown parts).

READ FULL TEXT

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset