We show that recursive programs where variables range over finite domains can be effectively and efficiently analyzed by describing the analysis algorithm using a formula in a fixed-point calculus. In contrast with programming in traditional languages, a fixed-point calculus serves as a high-level programming language to easily, correctly, and succinctly describe model-checking algorithms. While there have been declarative high-level formalisms that have been proposed earlier for analysis problems (e.g., Datalog), the fixed-point calculus we propose has the salient feature that it also allows algorithmic aspects to be specified. We exhibit two classes of algorithms of symbolic (BDD-based) algorithms written using this framework - one for checking for errors in sequential recursive Boolean programs, and the other to check for errors reachable within a bounded number of context-switches in a concurrent recursive Boolean program. Our formal-ization of these otherwise complex algorithms is extremely simple, and spans just a page of fixed-point formulae. Moreover, we implement these algorithms in a tool called GETAFIX which expresses algorithms as fixed-point formulae and evaluates them efficiently using a symbolic fixed-point solver called MUCKE. The resulting model-checking tools are surprisingly efficient and are competitive in performance with mature existing tools that have been fine-tuned for these problems.

Analyzing Recursive Programs using Fixed-point Calculus

PARLATO G
2009-01-01

Abstract

We show that recursive programs where variables range over finite domains can be effectively and efficiently analyzed by describing the analysis algorithm using a formula in a fixed-point calculus. In contrast with programming in traditional languages, a fixed-point calculus serves as a high-level programming language to easily, correctly, and succinctly describe model-checking algorithms. While there have been declarative high-level formalisms that have been proposed earlier for analysis problems (e.g., Datalog), the fixed-point calculus we propose has the salient feature that it also allows algorithmic aspects to be specified. We exhibit two classes of algorithms of symbolic (BDD-based) algorithms written using this framework - one for checking for errors in sequential recursive Boolean programs, and the other to check for errors reachable within a bounded number of context-switches in a concurrent recursive Boolean program. Our formal-ization of these otherwise complex algorithms is extremely simple, and spans just a page of fixed-point formulae. Moreover, we implement these algorithms in a tool called GETAFIX which expresses algorithms as fixed-point formulae and evaluates them efficiently using a symbolic fixed-point solver called MUCKE. The resulting model-checking tools are surprisingly efficient and are competitive in performance with mature existing tools that have been fine-tuned for these problems.
2009
978-1-60558-392-1
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11695/83779
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