DocumentCode
3412821
Title
Bridging the gap between formal specification and analysis of communication protocols
Author
Miller, Raymond E. ; Xue, Yong
Author_Institution
Dept. of Comput. Sci., Maryland Univ., College Park, MD, USA
fYear
1996
fDate
27-29 Mar 1996
Firstpage
225
Lastpage
231
Abstract
SDL, Estelle and LOTOS are three high-level formal description techniques (FDT) that have been developed and standardized by the international organizations, the CCITT and ISO respectively, for the specification of industry-strength communication protocols. It is crucial to formally verify an FDT protocol specification before its implementation. Most formal analysis and verification techniques for communication protocols, however, have been based on mathematically simple low-level formulations such as finite state machines (FSM) or extension of this model (EFSM). There is a gap between the low-level formal models and the high-level FDTs in terms of expressive power and verifiability, which prohibits the use of existing state/transition based formal analysis methods, such as reachability analysis, for direct use in the formal verification of the protocols specified in the FDTs. This paper proposes a uniform framework as an approach to bridging the gap through systematic reduction of the FDT protocol specifications to a common intermediate model called the structured system of communicating machines (SSCM) which is an EFSM based, powerful, yet rather simply defined formalism. LOTOS is then used to demonstrate the applicability of the approach by developing a complete set of transformation rules and providing the proof for the semantic perseverance of those transformation rules under a well-defined event trace equivalence
Keywords
ISO standards; computer networks; finite state machines; formal specification; formal verification; protocols; specification languages; telecommunication standards; CCITT; Estelle; FDT protocol specification; ISO; LOTOS; SDL; communication protocols; computer networks; event trace equivalence; finite state machines; formal analysis; formal protocol verification; formal specification; formal verification techniques; high-level FDT; high-level formal description techniques; international organizations; low-level formal models; reachability analysis; standardization; state/transition based methods; structured system of communicating machines; transformation rule; Automata; Communication industry; Computer industry; Computer science; Educational institutions; Formal specifications; Formal verification; Power system modeling; Protocols; Testing;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Computers and Communications, 1996., Conference Proceedings of the 1996 IEEE Fifteenth Annual International Phoenix Conference on
Conference_Location
Scottsdale, AZ
Print_ISBN
0-7803-3255-5
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/PCCC.1996.493638
Filename
493638
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