DocumentCode
2194855
Title
Probabilistic abstraction for model checking: an approach based on property testing
Author
Laplante, Sophie ; Lassaigne, Richard ; Magniez, Frédéric ; Peyronnet, Sylvain ; De Rougemont, Michel
Author_Institution
Univ. Paris-Sud, France
fYear
2002
fDate
2002
Firstpage
30
Lastpage
39
Abstract
The goal of model checking is to verify the correctness of a given program, on all its inputs. The main obstacle, in many cases, is the intractably large size of the program\´s transition system. Property testing is a randomized method to verify whether some fixed property holds on individual inputs, by looking at a small random part of that input. We join the strengths of both approaches by introducing a new notion of probabilistic abstraction, and by extending the framework of model checking to include the use of these abstractions. Our abstractions map transition systems associated with large graphs to small transition systems associated with small random subgraphs. This reduces the original transition system to a family of small, even constant-size, transition systems. We prove that with high probability, "sufficiently" incorrect programs will be rejected (E-robustness). We also prove that under a certain condition (exactness), correct programs will never be rejected (soundness). Our work applies to programs for graph properties such as bipartiteness, k-colorability, or any ∃∀ first order graph properties. Our main contribution is to show how to apply the ideas of property testing to syntactic programs for such properties. We give a concrete example of an abstraction for a program for bipartiteness. Finally, we show that the relaxation of the test alone does not yield transition systems small enough to use the standard model checking method. More specifically, we prove, using methods from communication complexity, that the OBDD size remains exponential for approximate bipartiteness.
Keywords
program verification; temporal logic; abstraction method; correctness; model checking; property testing; temporal logic; transition systems; verification of programs; Application software; Combinatorial mathematics; Complexity theory; Computer languages; Computer science; Concrete; Data structures; Logic; Sampling methods; System testing;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Logic in Computer Science, 2002. Proceedings. 17th Annual IEEE Symposium on
ISSN
1043-6871
Print_ISBN
0-7695-1483-9
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/LICS.2002.1029815
Filename
1029815
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