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computer science Computer science is the study of computation, automation, and information. Computer science spans theoretical disciplines (such as algorithms, theory of computation, information theory, and automation) to Applied science, practical discipli ...
, model checking or property checking is a method for checking whether a finite-state model of a system meets a given specification (also known as correctness). This is typically associated with hardware or
software systems A software system is a system of intercommunicating components based on software forming part of a computer system (a combination of hardware and software). It "consists of a number of separate programs, configuration files, which are used to ...
, where the specification contains liveness requirements (such as avoidance of
livelock In concurrent computing, deadlock is any situation in which no member of some group of entities can proceed because each waits for another member, including itself, to take action, such as sending a message or, more commonly, releasing a loc ...
) as well as safety requirements (such as avoidance of states representing a system crash). In order to solve such a problem
algorithm In mathematics and computer science, an algorithm () is a finite sequence of rigorous instructions, typically used to solve a class of specific problems or to perform a computation. Algorithms are used as specifications for performing ...
ically, both the model of the system and its specification are formulated in some precise mathematical language. To this end, the problem is formulated as a task in
logic Logic is the study of correct reasoning. It includes both formal and informal logic. Formal logic is the science of deductively valid inferences or of logical truths. It is a formal science investigating how conclusions follow from prem ...
, namely to check whether a
structure A structure is an arrangement and organization of interrelated elements in a material object or system, or the object or system so organized. Material structures include man-made objects such as buildings and machines and natural objects such a ...
satisfies a given logical formula. This general concept applies to many kinds of logic and many kinds of structures. A simple model-checking problem consists of verifying whether a formula in the propositional logic is satisfied by a given structure.


Overview

Property checking is used for verification when two descriptions are not equivalent. During refinement, the specification is complemented with details that are unnecessary in the higher-level specification. There is no need to verify the newly introduced properties against the original specification since this is not possible. Therefore, the strict bi-directional equivalence check is relaxed to a one-way property check. The implementation or design is regarded as a model of the system, whereas the specifications are properties that the model must satisfy. An important class of model-checking methods has been developed for checking models of hardware and
software Software is a set of computer programs and associated documentation and data. This is in contrast to hardware, from which the system is built and which actually performs the work. At the lowest programming level, executable code consist ...
designs where the specification is given by a
temporal logic In logic, temporal logic is any system of rules and symbolism for representing, and reasoning about, propositions qualified in terms of time (for example, "I am ''always'' hungry", "I will ''eventually'' be hungry", or "I will be hungry ''until'' I ...
formula. Pioneering work in temporal logic specification was done by
Amir Pnueli Amir Pnueli ( he, אמיר פנואלי; April 22, 1941 – November 2, 2009) was an Israeli computer scientist and the 1996 Turing Award recipient. Biography Pnueli was born in Nahalal, in the British Mandate of Palestine (now in Israel) and re ...
, who received the 1996 Turing award for "seminal work introducing temporal logic into computing science". Model checking began with the pioneering work of E. M. Clarke, E. A. Emerson,Edmund M. Clarke, E. Allen Emerson
"Design and Synthesis of Synchronization Skeletons Using Branching-Time Temporal Logic"
Logic of Programs 1981: 52-71.
by J. P. Queille, and J. Sifakis. Clarke, Emerson, and Sifakis shared the 2007
Turing Award The ACM A. M. Turing Award is an annual prize given by the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) for contributions of lasting and major technical importance to computer science. It is generally recognized as the highest distinction in compu ...
for their seminal work founding and developing the field of model checking. Model checking is most often applied to hardware designs. For software, because of undecidability (see computability theory) the approach cannot be fully algorithmic, apply to all systems, and always give an answer; in the general case, it may fail to prove or disprove a given property. In embedded-systems hardware, it is possible to validate a specification delivered, e.g., by means of UML activity diagrams or control-interpreted Petri nets. The structure is usually given as a source code description in an industrial hardware description language or a special-purpose language. Such a program corresponds to a finite state machine (FSM), i.e., a directed graph consisting of nodes (or vertices) and edges. A set of atomic propositions is associated with each node, typically stating which memory elements are one. The nodes represent states of a system, the edges represent possible transitions that may alter the state, while the atomic propositions represent the basic properties that hold at a point of execution. Formally, the problem can be stated as follows: given a desired property, expressed as a temporal logic formula p, and a structure M with initial state s, decide if M,s \models p. If M is finite, as it is in hardware, model checking reduces to a graph search.


Symbolic model checking

Instead of enumerating reachable states one at a time, the state space can sometimes be traversed more efficiently by considering large numbers of states at a single step. When such state-space traversal is based on representations of a set of states and transition relations as logical formulas,
binary decision diagrams In computer science, a binary decision diagram (BDD) or branching program is a data structure that is used to represent a Boolean function. On a more abstract level, BDDs can be considered as a compressed representation of sets or relations. U ...
(BDD) or other related data structures, the model-checking method is ''symbolic''. Historically, the first symbolic methods used BDDs. After the success of
propositional satisfiability In logic and computer science, the Boolean satisfiability problem (sometimes called propositional satisfiability problem and abbreviated SATISFIABILITY, SAT or B-SAT) is the problem of determining if there exists an interpretation that satisfi ...
in solving the planning problem in
artificial intelligence Artificial intelligence (AI) is intelligence—perceiving, synthesizing, and inferring information—demonstrated by machines, as opposed to intelligence displayed by animals and humans. Example tasks in which this is done include speech ...
(see satplan) in 1996, the same approach was generalized to model checking for
linear temporal logic In logic, linear temporal logic or linear-time temporal logic (LTL) is a modal temporal logic with modalities referring to time. In LTL, one can encode formulae about the future of paths, e.g., a condition will eventually be true, a condition wil ...
(LTL): the planning problem corresponds to model checking for safety properties. This method is known as bounded model checking. The success of Boolean satisfiability solvers in bounded model checking led to the widespread use of satisfiability solvers in symbolic model checking.


Example

One example of such a system requirement: ''Between the time an elevator is called at a floor and the time it opens its doors at that floor, the elevator can arrive at that floor at most twice''. The authors of "Patterns in Property Specification for Finite-State Verification" translate this requirement into the following LTL formula: :\begin\Box\Big((\texttt \lor \Diamond \texttt) \to & \big((\lnot \texttt \lor \lnot \texttt) ~\mathcal \\ & (\texttt \lor ((\texttt \land \lnot \texttt) ~\mathcal\\ & (\texttt \lor ((\lnot \texttt \land \lnot \texttt) ~\mathcal \\ & (\texttt \lor ((\texttt \land \lnot \texttt) ~\mathcal \\ & (\texttt \lor (\lnot \texttt ~\mathcal~ \texttt))))))))\big)\Big)\end Here, \Box should be read as "always", \Diamond as "eventually", \mathcal as "until" and the other symbols are standard logical symbols, \lor for "or", \land for "and" and \lnot for "not".


Techniques

Model-checking tools face a combinatorial blow up of the state-space, commonly known as the state explosion problem, that must be addressed to solve most real-world problems. There are several approaches to combat this problem. # Symbolic algorithms avoid ever explicitly constructing the graph for the finite state machines (FSM); instead, they represent the graph implicitly using a formula in quantified propositional logic. The use of binary decision diagrams (BDDs) was made popular by the work of Ken McMillan and the development of open-source BDD manipulation libraries such as CUDD and BuDDy. # Bounded model-checking algorithms unroll the FSM for a fixed number of steps, k, and check whether a property violation can occur in k or fewer steps. This typically involves encoding the restricted model as an instance of SAT. The process can be repeated with larger and larger values of k until all possible violations have been ruled out (cf. Iterative deepening depth-first search). #
Abstraction Abstraction in its main sense is a conceptual process wherein general rules and concepts are derived from the usage and classification of specific examples, literal ("real" or " concrete") signifiers, first principles, or other methods. "An abst ...
attempts to prove properties of a system by first simplifying it. The simplified system usually does not satisfy exactly the same properties as the original one so that a process of refinement may be necessary. Generally, one requires the abstraction to be ''sound'' (the properties proved on the abstraction are true of the original system); however, sometimes the abstraction is not ''complete'' (not all true properties of the original system are true of the abstraction). An example of abstraction is to ignore the values of non-boolean variables and to only consider boolean variables and the control flow of the program; such an abstraction, though it may appear coarse, may, in fact, be sufficient to prove e.g. properties of
mutual exclusion In computer science, mutual exclusion is a property of concurrency control, which is instituted for the purpose of preventing race conditions. It is the requirement that one thread of execution never enters a critical section while a concurren ...
. # Counterexample-guided abstraction refinement (CEGAR) begins checking with a coarse (i.e. imprecise) abstraction and iteratively refines it. When a violation (i.e. counterexample) is found, the tool analyzes it for feasibility (i.e., is the violation genuine or the result of an incomplete abstraction?). If the violation is feasible, it is reported to the user. If it is not, the proof of infeasibility is used to refine the abstraction and checking begins again. Model-checking tools were initially developed to reason about the logical correctness of discrete state systems, but have since been extended to deal with real-time and limited forms of hybrid systems.


First-order logic

Model checking is also studied in the field of
computational complexity theory In theoretical computer science and mathematics, computational complexity theory focuses on classifying computational problems according to their resource usage, and relating these classes to each other. A computational problem is a task solved ...
. Specifically, a first-order logical formula is fixed without free variables and the following
decision problem In computability theory and computational complexity theory, a decision problem is a computational problem that can be posed as a yes–no question of the input values. An example of a decision problem is deciding by means of an algorithm whe ...
is considered: ''Given a finite
interpretation Interpretation may refer to: Culture * Aesthetic interpretation, an explanation of the meaning of a work of art * Allegorical interpretation, an approach that assumes a text should not be interpreted literally * Dramatic Interpretation, an event ...
, for instance, one described as a
relational database A relational database is a (most commonly digital) database based on the relational model of data, as proposed by E. F. Codd in 1970. A system used to maintain relational databases is a relational database management system (RDBMS). Many relati ...
, decide whether the interpretation is a model of the formula.'' This problem is in the circuit class AC0. It is tractable when imposing some restrictions on the input structure: for instance, requiring that it has treewidth bounded by a constant (which more generally implies the tractability of model checking for
monadic second-order logic In mathematical logic, monadic second-order logic (MSO) is the fragment of second-order logic where the second-order quantification is limited to quantification over sets. It is particularly important in the logic of graphs, because of Courcelle's t ...
), bounding the degree of every domain element, and more general conditions such as
bounded expansion In graph theory, a family of graphs is said to have bounded expansion if all of its shallow minors are sparse graphs. Many natural families of sparse graphs have bounded expansion. A closely related but stronger property, polynomial expansion, i ...
, locally bounded expansion, and nowhere-dense structures. These results have been extended to the task of enumerating all solutions to a first-order formula with free variables.


Tools

Here is a list of significant model-checking tools: *
Alloy An alloy is a mixture of chemical elements of which at least one is a metal. Unlike chemical compounds with metallic bases, an alloy will retain all the properties of a metal in the resulting material, such as electrical conductivity, ductili ...
(Alloy Analyzer) * BLAST (Berkeley Lazy Abstraction Software Verification Tool) * CADP (Construction and Analysis of Distributed Processes) a toolbox for the design of communication protocols and distributed systems * CPAchecker: an open-source software model checker for C programs, based on the CPA framework * ECLAIR: a platform for the automatic analysis, verification, testing, and transformation of C and C++ programs *
FDR2 FDR (Failures-Divergences Refinement) and subsequently FDR2, FDR3 and FDR4 are refinement checking software tools, designed to check formal models expressed in Communicating sequential processes (CSP). The tools were originally developed by Fo ...
: a model checker for verifying real-time systems modelled and specified as CSP Processes *
ISP An Internet service provider (ISP) is an organization that provides services for accessing, using, or participating in the Internet. ISPs can be organized in various forms, such as commercial, community-owned, non-profit, or otherwise private ...
code level verifier for
MPI MPI or Mpi may refer to: Science and technology Biology and medicine * Magnetic particle imaging, an emerging non-invasive tomographic technique * Myocardial perfusion imaging, a nuclear medicine procedure that illustrates the function of the hear ...
programs *
Java Pathfinder Java Pathfinder (JPF) is a system to verify executable Java bytecode programs. JPF was developed at the NASA Ames Research Center and open sourced in 2005. The acronym JPF is not to be confused with the unrelated ''Java Plugin Framework'' project ...
: an open-source model checker for Java programs * Libdmc: a framework for distributed model checking * mCRL2 Toolset,
Boost Software License Boost is a set of libraries for the C++ programming language that provides support for tasks and structures such as linear algebra, pseudorandom number generation, multithreading, image processing, regular expressions, and unit testing. It ...
, Based on ACP * NuSMV: a new symbolic model checker * PAT: an enhanced simulator, model checker and refinement checker for concurrent and real-time systems * Prism: a probabilistic symbolic model checker * Roméo: an integrated tool environment for modelling, simulation, and verification of real-time systems modelled as parametric, time, and stopwatch Petri nets * SPIN: a general tool for verifying the correctness of distributed software models in a rigorous and mostly automated fashion * TAPAs: a tool for the analysis of process algebra * TAPAAL: an integrated tool environment for modelling, validation, and verification of Timed-Arc Petri Nets * TLA+ model checker by Leslie Lamport * UPPAAL: an integrated tool environment for modelling, validation, and verification of real-time systems modelled as networks of timed automata * ZingZing
/ref> – experimental tool from
Microsoft Microsoft Corporation is an American multinational technology corporation producing computer software, consumer electronics, personal computers, and related services headquartered at the Microsoft Redmond campus located in Redmond, Washi ...
to validate state models of software at various levels: high-level protocol descriptions, work-flow specifications, web services, device drivers, and protocols in the core of the operating system. Zing is currently being used for developing drivers for Windows.


See also


References


Further reading

* * * * * *. JA Bergstra, A. Ponse and SA Smolka, editors." (). * * * * * * * (this is also a very good introduction and overview of model checking) {{DEFAULTSORT:Model Checking