info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Improving lazy abstraction for SCR specifications through constraint relaxation
Fecha
2018-03Registro en:
Degiovanni, Renzo Gastón; Ponzio, Pablo Daniel; Aguirre, Nazareno Matias; Frias, Marcelo Fabian; Improving lazy abstraction for SCR specifications through constraint relaxation; John Wiley & Sons Ltd; Software Testing, Verification & Reliability; 28; 2; 3-2018
0960-0833
1099-1689
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Degiovanni, Renzo Gastón
Ponzio, Pablo Daniel
Aguirre, Nazareno Matias
Frias, Marcelo Fabian
Resumen
Formal requirements specifications, eg, software cost reduction (SCR) specifications, are challenging to analyse using automated techniques such as model checking. Since such specifications are meant to capture requirements, they tend to refer to real-world magnitudes often characterized through variables over large domains. At the same time, they feature a high degree of nondeterminism, as opposed to other analysis contexts such as (sequential) program verification. This makes model checking of SCR specifications difficult even for symbolic approaches. Moreover, automated abstraction refinement techniques such as counterexample guided abstraction refinement fail in many cases in this context, since the concrete state space is typically large, and reaching specific states of interest may require complex executions involving many different states, causing these approaches to perform many abstraction refinements, and making them ineffective in practice. In this paper, an approach to tackle the above situation, through a 2-stage abstraction, is presented. The specification is first relaxed, by disregarding the constraints imposed in the specification by physical laws or by the environment, before being fed to a counterexample guided abstraction refinement procedure, tailored to SCR. By relaxing the original specification, shorter spurious counterexamples are produced, favouring the abstraction refinement through the introduction of fewer abstraction predicates. Then, when a counterexample is concretizable with respect to the relaxed (concrete) specification but it is spurious with respect to the original specification, an efficient though incomplete refinement step is applied to the constraints, to cause the removal of the spurious case. This approach is experimentally assessed, comparing it with related techniques in the verification of properties and in automated test case generation, using various SCR specifications drawn from the literature as case studies. The experiments show that this new approach runs faster and scales better to larger, more complex specifications than related techniques.