| 17914 |      1 | (*<*)theory Base imports Main begin(*>*)
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| 10123 |      2 | 
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| 10867 |      3 | section{*Case Study: Verified Model Checking*}
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| 10123 |      4 | 
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| 10362 |      5 | text{*\label{sec:VMC}
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| 10867 |      6 | This chapter ends with a case study concerning model checking for 
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|  |      7 | Computation Tree Logic (CTL), a temporal logic.
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|  |      8 | Model checking is a popular technique for the verification of finite
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| 10795 |      9 | state systems (implementations) with respect to temporal logic formulae
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| 10867 |     10 | (specifications) \cite{ClarkeGP-book,Huth-Ryan-book}. Its foundations are set theoretic
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|  |     11 | and this section will explore them in HOL\@. This is done in two steps.  First
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| 10178 |     12 | we consider a simple modal logic called propositional dynamic
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| 11458 |     13 | logic (PDL)\@.  We then proceed to the temporal logic CTL, which is
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| 10867 |     14 | used in many real
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| 10123 |     15 | model checkers. In each case we give both a traditional semantics (@{text \<Turnstile>}) and a
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|  |     16 | recursive function @{term mc} that maps a formula into the set of all states of
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|  |     17 | the system where the formula is valid. If the system has a finite number of
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| 10867 |     18 | states, @{term mc} is directly executable: it is a model checker, albeit an
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|  |     19 | inefficient one. The main proof obligation is to show that the semantics
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| 10123 |     20 | and the model checker agree.
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|  |     21 | 
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| 10133 |     22 | \underscoreon
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| 10123 |     23 | 
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| 11458 |     24 | Our models are \emph{transition systems}:\index{transition systems}
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|  |     25 | sets of \emph{states} with
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|  |     26 | transitions between them.  Here is a simple example:
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| 10133 |     27 | \begin{center}
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|  |     28 | \unitlength.5mm
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|  |     29 | \thicklines
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|  |     30 | \begin{picture}(100,60)
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|  |     31 | \put(50,50){\circle{20}}
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|  |     32 | \put(50,50){\makebox(0,0){$p,q$}}
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|  |     33 | \put(61,55){\makebox(0,0)[l]{$s_0$}}
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|  |     34 | \put(44,42){\vector(-1,-1){26}}
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|  |     35 | \put(16,18){\vector(1,1){26}}
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|  |     36 | \put(57,43){\vector(1,-1){26}}
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|  |     37 | \put(10,10){\circle{20}}
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|  |     38 | \put(10,10){\makebox(0,0){$q,r$}}
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|  |     39 | \put(-1,15){\makebox(0,0)[r]{$s_1$}}
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|  |     40 | \put(20,10){\vector(1,0){60}}
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|  |     41 | \put(90,10){\circle{20}}
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|  |     42 | \put(90,10){\makebox(0,0){$r$}}
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|  |     43 | \put(98, 5){\line(1,0){10}}
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|  |     44 | \put(108, 5){\line(0,1){10}}
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|  |     45 | \put(108,15){\vector(-1,0){10}}
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|  |     46 | \put(91,21){\makebox(0,0)[bl]{$s_2$}}
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|  |     47 | \end{picture}
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|  |     48 | \end{center}
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| 11458 |     49 | Each state has a unique name or number ($s_0,s_1,s_2$), and in each state
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|  |     50 | certain \emph{atomic propositions} ($p,q,r$) hold.  The aim of temporal logic
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|  |     51 | is to formalize statements such as ``there is no path starting from $s_2$
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|  |     52 | leading to a state where $p$ or $q$ holds,'' which is true, and ``on all paths
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|  |     53 | starting from $s_0$, $q$ always holds,'' which is false.
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| 10123 |     54 | 
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| 11458 |     55 | Abstracting from this concrete example, we assume there is a type of
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| 10281 |     56 | states:
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| 10123 |     57 | *}
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|  |     58 | 
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| 10133 |     59 | typedecl state
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| 10123 |     60 | 
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|  |     61 | text{*\noindent
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| 11458 |     62 | Command \commdx{typedecl} merely declares a new type but without
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| 10983 |     63 | defining it (see \S\ref{sec:typedecl}). Thus we know nothing
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| 10281 |     64 | about the type other than its existence. That is exactly what we need
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|  |     65 | because @{typ state} really is an implicit parameter of our model.  Of
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|  |     66 | course it would have been more generic to make @{typ state} a type
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|  |     67 | parameter of everything but declaring @{typ state} globally as above
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|  |     68 | reduces clutter.  Similarly we declare an arbitrary but fixed
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| 10867 |     69 | transition system, i.e.\ a relation between states:
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| 10123 |     70 | *}
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|  |     71 | 
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|  |     72 | consts M :: "(state \<times> state)set";
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|  |     73 | 
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|  |     74 | text{*\noindent
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| 27015 |     75 | This is Isabelle's way of declaring a constant without defining it.
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| 10133 |     76 | Finally we introduce a type of atomic propositions
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| 10123 |     77 | *}
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| 10133 |     78 | 
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| 18724 |     79 | typedecl "atom"
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| 10133 |     80 | 
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|  |     81 | text{*\noindent
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|  |     82 | and a \emph{labelling function}
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|  |     83 | *}
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|  |     84 | 
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|  |     85 | consts L :: "state \<Rightarrow> atom set"
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|  |     86 | 
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|  |     87 | text{*\noindent
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|  |     88 | telling us which atomic propositions are true in each state.
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|  |     89 | *}
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|  |     90 | 
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| 10123 |     91 | (*<*)end(*>*)
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