| Title: | Formal Analysis and Verification |
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| Code: | FAV |
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| Ac.Year: | 2011/2012 |
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| Term: | Winter |
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| Study plans: | |
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| Language: | Czech, English |
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| Public info: | http://www.fit.vutbr.cz/study/courses/FAV/public/ |
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| Credits: | 5 |
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| Completion: | accreditation+exam (written&verbal) |
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Type of instruction: | | Hour/sem | Lectures | Sem. Exercises | Lab. exercises | Comp. exercises | Other |
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| Hours: | 39 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 13 |
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| | Examination | Tests | Exercises | Laboratories | Other |
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| Points: | 70 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 30 |
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| Guarantee: | Vojnar Tomáš, prof. Ing., Ph.D., DITS |
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| Lecturer: | Vojnar Tomáš, prof. Ing., Ph.D., DITS |
| Faculty: | Faculty of Information Technology BUT |
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| Department: | Department of Intelligent Systems FIT BUT |
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| Prerequisites: | |
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| | | Learning objectives: |
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The goal of the course is to introduce formal analysis and verification
to students as a modern and promising method of automated
evaluation of properties of various kinds of safety-critical systems
(such as drivers and other parts of operating systems, control
software, workflow, communication protocols, parts of hardware, etc.).
The course acquaints students both with the
theoretical background of the given area, with computer-aided
tools based on them as well as with successful applications of formal
analysis and verification in practice (Microsoft, Intel, Nasa, Airbus, ...). | | Description: |
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Formal analysis and verification as a modern complement and/or
alternative to validating properties of systems by
means of simulation or testing. Selected formalisms for specifying properties to be checked. Model checking: formal verification
based on a systematic state space exploration. Various approaches to state space reductions, especially the partial order reduction. Methods of
automated abstraction of systems being examined, especially predicate
abstraction. Modern
methods of SAT and SMT solving and their aplications in formal analysis
and verification. Static analysis based on looking for error patterns,
data flow analysis, and abstract interpretation. A brief description of
several advanced computer-aided tools for formal
analysis and verification: SMV, Spin, Slam, Blast,
Java
PathFinder, ARMC, FindBugs, etc.
(according to the current state of the art).
| | Knowledge and skills required for the course: |
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Knowledge of discrete mathematics, the theory of formal languages, and algorithmics on the bachelor's level is assumed.
| | Subject specific learning outcomes and competences: |
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Students are acquainted with principles and methods of formal analysis
and
verification and with their application within the process of designing
safety-critical systems. Students know capabilities and the basic
ways of using computer-aided tools for formal analysis and verification. | | Generic learning outcomes and competences: |
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Acquired knowledge about the significance and possibilities of using
formal methods within the development of various kinds of systems and
about their growing use in practice. | | Syllabus of lectures: |
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- The meaning of the terms ``formal analysis and verification''.
Capabilities and advantages of methods of formal analysis and verification.
Various approaches to formal analysis and verification: model checking,
static analysis, and theorem proving.
- State spaces, state space paths, abstractions of states and
transitions. Interleaving and true concurrency. Linear and branching
time. Safety, liveness, and fairness.
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Temporal logics CTL and CTL*, model checking systems whose properties
are specified in CTL or CTL* using explicitly represented state spaces.
- Binary decision diagrams for a compact, symbolic representation of state spaces and their implementation.
- Lattices, fix points, and the Knaster-Tarski theorem as a formal
basis for symbolic model checking.
- Symbolic model checking for CTL and
CTL*.
- The
temporal logic LTL, the correspondence between Büchi automata and LTL
formulae, model checking systems whose properties are specified in LTL
using Büchi automata.
- The partial order state space reduction. The symmetry state space
reduction. An overview of other state space reduction methods.
Compositional verification.
- Methods of automated abstraction of systems, the predicate
abstraction, the counter-example guided abstraction refinement loop,
Craig interpolation.
- Decision procedures and modern methods of SAT and SMT solving and
their use in formal verification (e.g., in the predicate abstraction).
- Classical dataflow analyses (such as live variables, available
expressions, etc.) as well as some selected, more advanced dataflow
analyses (like some pointer analyses), their description via flow
equations, and iterative methods of solving these methods.
- A brief note on abstract interpretation and its use for defining
static analyses.
- Static analyses based on searching for bug patterns, a note on selected dynamic analyses, esp. those for detecting concurrency-related errors.
| | Syllabus - others, projects and individual work of students: |
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- A project including an installation of a selected tool for automated verification on a formal basis (Spin, Blast, ARMC, SMV, JPF, FindBugs, Invader, Uppaal aj.), experiments with this tool, and a preparation of an essay describing principles on which the chosen tool is built (10 pts.) and the performed experiments (10 pts. for experiments with existing case studies, 10 pts. for new case studies). It is possible to agree on studying a tool based on principles that are not a part of the lectures (theorem proving, real-time systems, etc.).
| | Fundamental literature: |
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- Baier, C., Katoen, J.-P.: Principles of Model Checking. MIT Press, 2008.
- Nielson, F., Nielson, H.R., Hankin, C.: Principles of Program Analysis, Springer-Verlag, 2005.
- Edmund, M.C., Grumberg, O., Peled, D.A.: Model Checking. MIT Press, 2000.
- Khedker, U., Sanyal, A., Sathe, B.: Data Flow Analysis: Theory and Practice, CRC Press, 2009.
| | Study literature: |
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- Baier, C., Katoen, J.-P.: Principles of Model Checking. MIT Press, 2008.
- Nielson, F., Nielson, H.R., Hankin, C.: Principles of Program Analysis, Springer-Verlag, 2005.
- Edmund, M.C., Grumberg, O., Peled, D.A.: Model Checking. MIT Press, 2000.
- Aho, A.V., Lam, S., Sethi, R., Ullman, J.D.: Compilers: Principles, Techniques, and Tools. Addison Wesley, 2nd ed., 2006. The part devoted to static analysis.
- Bradley, A.R., Manna, Z.: The Calculus of Computation: Decision Procedures with Applications to Verification, Springer, 2007.
- Valmari, A.: The State Explosion Problem. In Reisig, W.,
Rozenberg, G.: Lectures on Petri Nets I: Basic Models, volume 1491 of Lecture Notes in Computer Science, pages 429-528. Springer-Verlag, 1998.
- Chess, B., West,J.: Secure Programming with Static Analysis. Addison-Wesley Professional, 2007.
- Khedker, U., Sanyal, A., Sathe, B.: Data Flow Analysis: Theory and Practice, CRC Press, 2009.
- Kroening, D., Strichman, O.: Decision Procedures: An Algorithmic Point of View, Springer, 2008.
- Holzmann, G.J.: The SPIN Model Checker: Primer and Reference Manual, Addison-Wesley Professional, 2003.
- Ben-Ari, M.: Principles of the Spin Model Checker, Springer, 2008.
- Bertot
Y., Castéran, P.: Interactive Theorem Proving and Program Development:
Coq'Art: The Calculus of Inductive Constructions, Springer, 2010.
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- Materials presented within the lectures and made accessible via the Internet.
- Materials freely accessible on the Internet, especially
papers and documentation related to the various computer-aided tools for formal analysis and verification.
| | Progress assessment: |
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- An evaluated project for 30 points.
- A final examination for 70 points.
- To be allowed to sit for the written examination, a student is to earn at least 15 points during the semester.
- The passing boundary w.r.t. the ECTS assessment: 50 points.
| | Exam prerequisites: |
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Having at least 50% of the possible point evaluation of the project. | | |
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