2015
Authors
Pedro, AD; Pereira, D; Pinho, LM; Pinto, JS;
Publication
RUNTIME VERIFICATION, RV 2015
Abstract
Temporal logics targeting real-time systems are traditionally undecidable. Based on a restricted fragment of MTL-integral, we propose a new approach for the runtime verification of hard real-time systems. The novelty of our technique is that it is based on incremental evaluation, allowing us to effectively treat duration properties (which play a crucial role in real-time systems). We describe the two levels of operation of our approach: offline simplification by quantifier removal techniques; and online evaluation of a three-valued interpretation for formulas of our fragment. Our experiments show the applicability of this mechanism as well as the validity of the provided complexity results.
2014
Authors
Pedro, AD; Pereira, D; Pinho, LM; Pinto, JS;
Publication
RELIABLE SOFTWARE TECHNOLOGIES - ADA-EUROPE 2014
Abstract
Runtime verification is an emerging discipline that investigates methods and tools to enable the verification of program properties during the execution of the application. The goal is to complement static analysis approaches, in particular when static verification leads to the explosion of states. Non-functional properties, such as the ones present in real-time systems are an ideal target for this kind of verification methodology, as are usually out of the range of the power and expressiveness of classic static analyses. In this paper, we present a framework that allows real-time programs written in Ada to be augmented with runtime verification capabilities. Our framework provides the infrastructures which is needed to instrument the code with runtime monitors. These monitors are responsible for observing the system and reaching verdicts about whether its behavior is compliant with its non-functional properties. We also sketch a contract language to extend the one currently provided by Ada, with the long term goal of having an elegant way in which runtime monitors can be automatically synthesized and instrumented into the target systems. The usefulness of the proposed approach is demonstrated by showing its use for an application scenario.
2014
Authors
Pedro, AD; Pereira, D; Pinho, LM; Pinto, JS;
Publication
NASA FORMAL METHODS, NFM 2014
Abstract
Runtime Monitoring of hard real-time embedded systems is a promising technique for ensuring that a running system respects timing constraints, possibly combined with faults originated by the software and/or hardware. This is particularly important when we have real-time embedded systems made of several components that must combine different levels of criticality, and different levels of correctness requirements. This paper introduces a compositional monitoring framework coupled with guarantees that include time isolation and the response time of a monitor for a predicted violation. The kind of monitors that we propose are automatically generated by synthesizing logic formulas of a timed temporal logic, and their correctness is ensured by construction.
2017
Authors
Matos Pedro, Ad; Pereira, D; Pinho, LM; Pinto, JS;
Publication
SIGBED Review
Abstract
Several methods have been proposed for performing schedulability analysis for both uni-processor and multi-processor real-time systems. Very few of these works use the power of formal logic to write unambiguous specifications and to allow the usage of theorem provers for building the proofs of interest with greater correctness guarantees. In this paper we address this challenge by: 1) defining a formal language that allows to specify periodic resource models; 2) describe a transformational approach to reasoning about timing properties of resource models by transforming the latter specifications into a satisfiability modulo theories problem.
2015
Authors
Pedro, AdM; Pereira, D; Pinho, LM; Pinto, JS;
Publication
SIGBED Review
Abstract
2018
Authors
Pedro, AD; Pinto, JS; Pereira, D; Pinho, LM;
Publication
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL ON SOFTWARE TOOLS FOR TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER
Abstract
Current real-time embedded systems development frameworks lack support for the verification of properties using explicit time where counting time (i.e., durations) may play an important role in the development process. Focusing on the real-time constraints inherent to these systems, we present a framework that addresses the specification of duration properties for runtime verification by employing a fragment of metric temporal logic with durations. We also provide an overview of the framework, the synthesis tools, and the library to support monitoring properties for real-time systems developed in C++11. The results obtained provide clear evidence of the feasibility and advantages of employing a duration-sensitive formalism to increase the dependability of avionic controller systems such as the PX4 and the Ardupilot flight stacks.
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