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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
31

Verification and validation of computer simulations with the purpose of licensing a pebble bed modular reactor

Bollen, Rob 12 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MBA)--Stellenbosch University, 2002. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: The Pebble Bed Modular Reactor is a new and inherently safe concept for a nuclear power generation plant. In order to obtain the necessary licenses to build and operate this reactor, numerous design and safety analyses need to be performed. The results of these analyses must be supported with substantial proof to provide the nuclear authorities with a sufficient level of confidence in these results to be able to supply the required licences. Beside the obvious need for a sufficient level of confidence in the safety analyses, the analyses concerned with investment protection also need to be reliable from the investors’ point of view. The process to be followed to provide confidence in these analyses is the verification and validation process. It is aimed at presenting reliable material against which to compare the results from the simulations. This material for comparison will consist of a combination of results from experimental data, extracts from actual plant data, analytical solutions and independently developed solutions for the simulation of the event to be analysed. Besides comparison with these alternative sources of information, confidence in the results will also be built by providing validated statements on the accuracy of the results and the boundary conditions with which the simulations need to comply. Numerous standards exist that address the verification and validation of computer software, for instance by organisations such as the American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME) and the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE). The focal points of the verification and validation of the design and safety analyses performed on typical PBMR modes and states, and the requirements imposed by both the local and overseas nuclear regulators, are not entirely enveloped by these standards. For this reason, PBMR developed a systematic and disciplined approach for the preparation of the Verification and Validation Plan, aimed at capturing the essence of the analyses. This approach aims to make a definite division between software development and the development of technical analyses, while still using similar processes for the verification and validation. The reasoning behind this is that technical analyses are performed by engineers and scientists who should only be responsible for the verification and validation of the models and data they use, but not for the software they are dependent on. Software engineers should be concerned with the delivery of qualified software to be used in the technical analyses. The PBMR verification and validation process is applicable to both hand calculations and computer-aided analyses, addressing specific requirements in clearly defined stages of the software and Technical Analysis life cycle. The verification and validation effort of the Technical Analysis activity is divided into the verification and validation of models and data, the review of calculational tasks, and the verification and validation of software, with the applicable information to be validated, captured in registers or databases. The resulting processes are as simple as possible, concise and practical. Effective use of resources is ensured and internationally accepted standards have been incorporated, aiding in faith in the process by all stakeholders, including investors, nuclear regulators and the public. / AFRIKAASE OPSOMMING: Die Modulêre Korrelbedreaktor is ’n nuwe konsep vir ’n kernkragsentrale wat inherent veilig is. Dit word deur PBMR (Edms.) Bpk. ontwikkel. Om die nodige vergunnings om so ’n reaktor te kan bou en bedryf, te bekom, moet ’n aansienlike hoeveelheid ontwerp- en veiligheidsondersoeke gedoen word. Die resultate wat hierdie ondersoeke oplewer, moet deur onweerlegbare bewyse ondersteun word om vir die owerhede ’n voldoende vlak van vertroue in die resultate te gee, sodat hulle die nodigde vergunnings kan maak. Benewens die ooglopende noodsaak om ’n voldoende vlak van vertroue in die resultate van die veiligheidsondersoeke te hê, moet die ondersoeke wat met die beskerming van die beleggers se beleggings gepaard gaan, net so betroubaar wees. Die proses wat gevolg word om vertroue in die resultate van die ondersoeke op te bou, is die proses van verifikasie en validasie. Dié proses is daarop gerig om betroubare vergelykingsmateriaal vir simulasies voor te lê. Hierdie vergelykingsmateriaal vir die gebeurtenis wat ondersoek word, sal bestaan uit enige kombinasie van inligting wat in toetsopstellings bekom is, wat in bestaande installasies gemeet is, wat analities bereken is; asook dit wat deur ’n derde party onafhanklik van die oorspronklike ontwikkelaars bekom is. Vertroue in die resultate van die ondersoeke sal, behalwe deur vergelyking met hierdie alternatiewe bronne van inligting, ook opgebou word deur die resultate te voorsien van ’n gevalideerde verklaring wat die akkuraatheid van die resultate aantoon en wat die grensvoorwaardes waaraan die simulasies ook moet voldoen, opsom. Daar bestaan ’n aansienlike hoeveelheid internasionaal aanvaarde standaarde wat die verifikasie en validasie van rekenaarsagteware aanspreek. Die standaarde kom van instansies soos die Amerikaanse Vereniging vir Meganiese Ingenieurs (ASME) en die Instituut vir Elektriese en Elektroniese Ingenieurs (IEEE) – ook van Amerika. Die aandag wat deur die Suid-Afrikaanse en oorsese kernkragreguleerders vereis word vir die toestande wat spesifiek geld vir korrelbedreaktors, word egter nie geheel en al deur daardie standaarde aangespreek nie. Daarom het die PBMR maatskappy ’n stelselmatige benadering ontwikkel om verifikasie- en validasieplanne voor te berei wat die essensie van die ondersoeke kan ondervang. Hierdie benadering is daarop gemik om ’n duidelike onderskeid te maak tussen die ontwikkeling van sagteware en die ontwikkeling van tegniese ondersoeke, terwyl steeds gelyksoortige prosesse in die verifikasie en validasie gebruik sal word. Die rede hiervoor is dat tegniese ondersoeke uitgevoer word deur ingenieurs en wetenskaplikes wat net vir verifikasie en validasie van hulle eie modelle en die gegewens verantwoordelik gehou kan word, maar nie vir die verifikasie en validasie van die sagteware wat hulle gebruik nie. Ingenieurs wat spesialiseer in sagteware-ontwikkeling behoort verantwoordelik te wees vir die daarstelling van sagteware wat deur die reguleerders gekwalifiseer kan word, sodat dit in tegniese ondersoeke op veiligheidsgebied gebruik kan word. Die verifikasie- en validasieproses van die PBMR is sowel vir handberekeninge as vir rekenaarondersteunde-ondersoek geskik. Hierdie proses spreek spesifieke vereistes in onderskeie stadiums gedurende die lewenssiklusse van die ontwikkeling van sagteware en van tegniese ondersoeke aan. Die verifikasie- en validasiewerk vir tegniese ondersoeksaktiwiteite is verdeel in die verifikasie en validasie van modelle en gegewens, die nasien van berekeninge en die verifikasie en validasie van sagteware, waarby die betrokke inligting wat gevalideer moet word, versamel word in registers of databasisse. Die prosesse wat hieruit voortgevloei het, is so eenvoudig as moontlik, beknop en prakties gehou. Hierdeur is ’n effektiewe benutting van bronne verseker. Internasionaal aanvaarde standaarde is gebruik wat die vertroue in die proses deur alle betrokkenes, insluitende beleggers, die owerhede en die publiek, sal bevorder.
32

A model checker for the LF system

Gerber, Erick D. B. 03 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MSc)--University of Stellenbosch, 2007. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: Computer aided veri cation techniques, such as model checking, can be used to improve the reliability of software. Model checking is an algorithmic approach to illustrate the correctness of temporal logic speci cations in the formal description of hardware and software systems. In contrast to traditional testing tools, model checking relies on an exhaustive search of all the possible con gurations that these systems may exhibit. Traditionally model checking is applied to abstract or high level designs of software. However, often interpreting or translating these abstract designs to implementations introduce subtle errors. In recent years one trend in model checking has been to apply the model checking algorithm directly to the implementations instead. This thesis is concerned with building an e cient model checker for a small concurrent langauge developed at the University of Stellenbosch. This special purpose langauge, LF, is aimed at developement of small embedded systems. The design of the language was carefully considered to promote safe programming practices. Furthermore, the language and its runtime support system was designed to allow directly model checking LF programs. To achieve this, the model checker extends the existing runtime support infrastructure to generate the state space of an executing LF program. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Rekenaar gebaseerde program toetsing, soos modeltoetsing, kan gebruik word om die betroubaarheid van sagteware te verbeter. Model toetsing is 'n algoritmiese benadering om die korrektheid van temporale logika spesi kasies in die beskrywing van harde- of sagteware te bewys. Anders as met tradisionlee program toetsing, benodig modeltoetsing 'n volledige ondersoek van al die moontlike toestande waarin so 'n beskrywing homself kan bevind. Model toetsing word meestal op abstrakte modelle van sagteware of die ontwerp toegepas. Indien die ontwerp of model aan al die spesi kasies voldoen word die abstrakte model gewoontlik vertaal na 'n implementasie. Die vertalings proses word gewoontlik met die hand gedoen en laat ruimte om nuwe foute, en selfs foute wat uitgeskakel in die model of ontwerp is te veroorsaak. Deesdae, is 'n gewilde benadering tot modeltoetsing om di e tegnieke direk op die implementasie toe te pas, en sodoende die ekstra moeite van model konstruksie en vertaling uit te skakel. Hierdie tesis handel oor die ontwerp, implementasie en toetsing van 'n e ektiewe modeltoetser vir 'n klein gelyklopende taal, LF, wat by die Universiteit van Stellenbosch ontwikkel is. Die enkeldoelige taal, LF, is gemik op die veilige ontwikkeling van ingebedde sagteware. Die taal is ontwerp om veilige programmerings praktyke aan te moedig. Verder is die taal en die onderliggende bedryfstelsel so ontwerp om 'n model toetser te akkomodeer. Om die LF programme direk te kan toets, is die model toetser 'n integrale deel van die bedryfstelsel sodat dit die program kan aandryf om alle moontlike toestande te besoek.
33

Three essays on the interface of computer science, economics and information systems

Hidvégi, Zoltán Tibor, 1970- 28 August 2008 (has links)
This thesis looks at three aspects related to the design of E-commerce systems, online auctions and distributed grid computing systems. We show how formal verification techniques from computer science can be applied to ensure correctness of system design and implementation at the code level. Through e-ticket sales example, we demonstrate that model checking can locate subtle but critical flaws that traditional control and auditing methods (e.g., penetration testing, analytical procedure) most likely miss. Auditors should understand formal verification methods, enforce engineering to use them to create designs with less of a chance of failure, and even practice formal verification themselves in order to offer credible control and assistance for critical e-systems. Next, we study why many online auctions offer fixed buy prices to understand why sellers and auctioneers voluntarily limit the surplus they can get from an auction. We show when either the seller of the dibbers are risk-averse, a properly chosen fixed permanent buy-price can increase the social surplus and does not decrease the expected utility of the sellers and bidders, and we characterize the unique equilibrium strategies of uniformly risk-averse buyers in a buy-price auction. In the final chapter we look at the design of a distributed grid-computing system. We show how code-instrumentation can be used to generate a witness of program execution, and show how this witness can be used to audit the work of self-interested grid agents. Using a trusted intermediary between grid providers and customers, the audit allows payment to be contingent on the successful audit results, and it creates a verified reputation history of grid providers. We show that enabling the free trade of reputations provides economic incentives to agents to perform the computations assigned, and it induces increasing effort levels as the agents' reputation increases. We show that in such a reputation market only high-type agents would have incentive to purchase a high reputation, and only low-type agents would use low reputations, thus a market works as a natural signaling mechanism about the agents' type. / text
34

Improving scalability of exploratory model checking

Boulgakov, Alexandre January 2016 (has links)
As software and hardware systems grow more complex and we begin to rely more on their correctness and reliability, it becomes exceedingly important to formally verify certain properties of these systems. If done na&iuml;vely, verifying a system can easily require exponentially more work than running it, in order to account for all possible executions. However, there are often symmetries or other properties of a system that can be exploited to reduce the amount of necessary work. In this thesis, we present a number of approaches that do this in the context of the CSP model checker FDR. CSP is named for Communicating Sequential Processes, or parallel combinations of state machines with synchronised communications. In the FDR model, the component processes are typically converted to explicit state machines while their parallel combination is evaluated lazily during model checking. Our contributions are motivated by this model but applicable to other models as well. We first address the scalability of the component machines by proposing a lazy compiler for a subset of CSP<sub>M</sub> selected to model parameterised state machines. This is a typical case where the state space explosion can make model checking impractical, since the size of the state space is exponential in the number and size of the parameters. A lazy approach to evaluating these systems allows only the reachable subset of the state space to be explored. As an example, in studying security protocols, it is common to model an intruder parameterised by knowledge of each of a list of facts; even a relatively small 100 facts results in an intractable 2<sup>100</sup> states, but the rest of the system can ensure that only a small number of these states are reachable. Next, we address the scalability of the overall combination by presenting novel algorithms for bisimulation reduction with respect to strong bisimulation, divergence- respecting delay bisimulation, and divergence-respecting weak bisimulation. Since a parallel composition is related to the Cartesian product of its components, performing a relatively time-consuming bisimulation reduction on the components can reduce its size significantly; an efficient bisimulation algorithm is therefore very desirable. This thesis is motivated by practical implementations, and we discuss an implementation of each of the proposed algorithms in FDR. We thoroughly evaluate their performance and demonstrate their effectiveness.
35

Challenges and opportunities for verification and validation of military simulation systems

Patton, Robert M. 01 April 2001 (has links)
No description available.

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