A Case Study in Model Checking Software Systems.

Abstract

Model checking is a proven successful technology for verifying hardware. It works, however, on only finite state machines, and most software systems have infinitely many states. Our approach to applying model checking to software hinges on identifying appropriate abstractions that exploit the nature of both the system, S, and the property, phi, to be verified. We check phi on an abstracted, but finite, model of S. Following this approach we verified three cache coherence protocols used in distributed file systems. These protocols have to satisfy this property: 'If a client believes that a cached file is valid then the authorized server believes that the client's copy is valid.' In our finite model of the system, we need only represent the 'beliefs' that a client and a server have about a cached file; we can abstract from the caches, the files' contents, and even the files themselves. Moreover, by successive application of the generalization rule from predicate logic, we need only consider a model with at most two clients, one server, and one file. We used McMillan's SMV model checker; on our most complicated protocol, SMV took less than 1 second to check over 43,600 reachable states.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Apr 01, 1996
Accession Number
ADA309147

Entities

People

  • Jeanette M. Wing
  • Mandana Vaziri-farahani

Organizations

  • Carnegie Mellon University

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Materials and Manufacturing Processes

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Abstracts
  • Case Studies
  • Communities
  • Computer Programming
  • Computer Science
  • Computers
  • Damage Detection
  • Debugging
  • Detection
  • Electronic Commerce
  • Engineering
  • Environment
  • Language
  • Software Development
  • Storage
  • United States
  • Validation

Fields of Study

  • Computer science

Readers

  • Computer Networking
  • Database Systems and Applications
  • Mathematical Modeling and Probability Theory.