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Methods and Algorithms for Scalable Verification of Asynchronous Designs

Concurrent systems are getting more complex with the advent of multi-core processors and the support of concurrent programs. However, errors of concurrent systems are too subtle to detect with the traditional testing and simulation. Model checking is an effective method to verify concurrent systems by exhaustively searching the complete state space exhibited by a system. However, the main challenge for model checking is state explosion, that is the state space of a concurrent system grows exponentially in the number of components of the system. The state space explosion problem prevents model checking from being applied to systems in realistic size.
After decades of intensive research, a large number of methods have been developed to attack this well-known problem. Compositional verification is one of the promising methods that can be scalable to large complex concurrent systems. In compositional verification, the task of verifying an entire system is divided into smaller tasks of verifying each component of the system individually. The correctness of the properties on the entire system can be derived from the results from the local verification on individual components. This method avoids building up the global state space for the entire system, and accordingly alleviates the state space explosion problem. In order to facilitate the application of compositional verification, several issues need to be addressed. The generation of over-approximate and yet accurate environments for components for local verification is a major focus of the automated compositional verification.
This dissertation addresses such issue by proposing two abstraction refinement methods that refine the state space of each component with an over-approximate environment iteratively. The basic idea of these two abstraction refinement methods is to examine the interface interactions among different components and remove the behaviors that are not allowed on the components' interfaces from their corresponding state space. After the extra behaviors introduced by the over-approximate environment are removed by the abstraction refinement methods, the initial coarse environments become more accurate. The difference between these two methods lies in the identification and removal of illegal behaviors generated by the over-approximate environments.
For local properties that can be verified on individual components, compositional reasoning can be scaled to large systems by leveraging the proposed abstraction refinement methods. However, for global properties that cannot be checked locally, the state space of the whole system needs to be constructed. To alleviate the state explosion problem when generating the global state space by composing the local state space of the individual components, this dissertation also proposes several state space reduction techniques to simplify the state space of each component to help the compositional minimization method to generate a much smaller global state space for the entire system. These state space reduction techniques are sound and complete in that they keep all the behaviors on the interface but do not introduce any extra behaviors, therefore, the same verification results derived from the reduced global state space are also valid on the original state space for the entire system.
An automated compositional verification framework integrated with all the abstraction refinement methods and the state space reduction techniques presented in this dissertation has been implemented in an explicit model checker Platu. It has been applied to experiments on several non-trivial asynchronous circuit designs to demonstrate its scalability. The experimental results show that our automated compositional verification framework is effective on these examples that are too complex for the monolithic model checking methods to handle.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:USF/oai:scholarcommons.usf.edu:etd-5459
Date01 January 2012
CreatorsYao, Haiqiong
PublisherScholar Commons
Source SetsUniversity of South Flordia
Detected LanguageEnglish
Typetext
Formatapplication/pdf
SourceGraduate Theses and Dissertations
Rightsdefault

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