Provably Correct Systems
Titre:
Provably Correct Systems
ISBN (Numéro international normalisé des livres):
9783319486284
Edition:
1st ed. 2017.
PRODUCTION_INFO:
Cham : Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Springer, 2017.
Description physique:
XV, 328 p. 84 illus., 48 illus. in color. online resource.
Collections:
NASA Monographs in Systems and Software Engineering,
Table des matières:
Foreword -- Preface -- Part I: Historic Account -- ProCoS: How It All Began - As Seen from Denmark -- Part II: Hybrid Systems -- Constraint-Solving Techniques for the Analysis of Probabilistic Hybrid Systems -- MARS: A Tool chain for Modelling, Analysis and Verification of Hybrid Systems -- Part III: Correctness of Concurrent Algorithms -- A Proof Method for Linearizability on TSO Architectures -- Part IV: Interfaces and Linking -- Linking Discrete and Continuous Models, Applied to Traffic Manoeuvres -- Towards Interface-Driven Design of Evolving Component-Based Architectures -- Part V: Automatic Verification -- Computing Verified Machine Address Bounds during Symbolic Exploration of Code -- Engineering a Formal, Executable x86 ISA Simulator for Software Verification -- Advances in Connection-Based Automated Theorem Proving -- Part VI: Run-Time Assertion Checking -- Run-Time Deadlock Detection -- In-Circuit Assertions and Exceptions for Reconfigurable Hardware Design -- Part VII: Formal and Semi-Formal Methods -- From ProCoS to Space and Mental Models - a Survey of Combing Formal and Semi-Formal Methods -- Part VIII: Web-Supported Communities in Science -- Provably Correct Systems: Community, Connections and Citations.
Extrait:
As computers increasingly control the systems and services we depend upon within our daily lives like transport, communications, and the media, ensuring these systems function correctly is of utmost importance. This book consists of twelve chapters and one historical account that were presented at a workshop in London in 2015, marking the 25th anniversary of the European ESPRIT Basic Research project 'ProCoS' (Provably Correct Systems). The ProCoS I and II projects pioneered and accelerated the automation of verification techniques, resulting in a wide range of applications within many trades and sectors such as aerospace, electronics, communications, and retail. The following topics are covered: An historical account of the ProCoS project Hybrid Systems Correctness of Concurrent Algorithms Interfaces and Linking Automatic Verification Run-time Assertions Checking Formal and Semi-Formal Methods
Auteur collectif ajouté:
Accès électronique:
Full Text Available From Springer Nature Computer Science 2017 Packages
Langue:
Anglais