2022
Authors
Cledou, G; Edixhoven, L; Jongmans, SS; Proença, J;
Publication
Dagstuhl Artifacts Ser.
Abstract
2022
Authors
Jongmans, SS; Proença, J;
Publication
ISoLA (1)
Abstract
Multiparty session types (MPST) constitute a method to simplify construction and analysis of distributed systems. The idea is that well-typedness of processes at compile-time (statically) entails deadlock freedom and protocol compliance of their sessions of communications at execution-time (dynamically). In practice, the premier approach to apply the MPST method in combination with mainstream programming languages has been based on API generation. However, existing MPST tools support only unilingual programming (homogeneity), while many real-world distributed systems are engineered using multilingual programming (heterogeneity). In this paper, we present a blueprint of ST4MP: a tool to apply the MPST method in multilingual programming, based on API generation.
2022
Authors
Bauer, T; Agirre, JA; Fürcho, D; Herzner, W; Hruska, B; Karaca, M; Pereira, D; Proença, J; Schlick, R; Sicher, R; Smrcka, A; Yayan, U; Sangchoolie, B;
Publication
EMBEDDED COMPUTER SYSTEMS: ARCHITECTURES, MODELING, AND SIMULATION, SAMOS 2021
Abstract
The complexity of systems continues to increase rapidly, especially due to the multi-level integration of subsystems from different domains into cyber-physical systems. This results in special challenges for the efficient verification and validation (V&V) of these systems with regard to their requirements and properties. In order to tackle the new challenges and improve the quality assurance processes, the V&V workflows have to be documented and analyzed. In this paper, a novel approach for the workflow modelling of V&V activities is presented. The generic approach is tailorable to different industrial domains and their specific constraints, V&V methods, and toolchains. The outcomes comprise a dedicated modelling notation (VVML) and tool-support using the modelling framework Enterprise Architect for the efficient documentation and implementation of workflows in the use cases. The solution enables the design of re-usable workflow assets such as V&V activities and artifacts that are exchanged between workflows. This work is part of the large scale European research project VALU3S that deals with the improvement and evaluation of V&V processes in different technical domains, focusing on safety, cybersecurity, and privacy properties.
2022
Authors
Edixhoven, L; Jongmans, SS; Proenca, J; Cledou, G;
Publication
ELECTRONIC PROCEEDINGS IN THEORETICAL COMPUTER SCIENCE
Abstract
Choreographic languages describe possible sequences of interactions among a set of agents. Typical models are based on languages or automata over sending and receiving actions. Pomsets provide a more compact alternative by using a partial order over these actions and by not making explicit the possible interleaving of concurrent actions. However, pomsets offer no compact representation of choices. For example, if an agent Alice can send one of two possible messages to Bob three times, one would need a set of 2 x 2 x 2 distinct pomsets to represent all possible branches of Alice's behaviour. This paper proposes an extension of pomsets, named branching pomsets, with a branching structure that can represent Alice's behaviour using 2 + 2 + 2 ordered actions. We encode choreographies as branching pomsets and show that the pomset semantics of the encoded choreographies are bisimilar to their operational semantics.
2022
Authors
Tapia Tarifa, SL; Proença, J;
Publication
FACS
Abstract
2022
Authors
Proença, J; Borrami, S; de Nova, JS; Pereira, D; Nandi, GS;
Publication
RSSRail
Abstract
Motor controllers, such as the ones used in signalling systems, include critical embedded software. Alstom is a company that produces such embedded systems, which must follow complex certification processes that require formal modelling and analysis. The formal analysis of these real-time systems have to balance between including enough details to be useful and abstracting away enough details to be verifiable. This paper describes our work in the context of the European VALU3S project to integrate the analysis of such systems with the Uppaal model checker during the development cycle, involving both developers from Alstom and academic partners. We use special Excel tables to configure the underlying Uppaal models and requirements, bridging these two stakeholders. We follow Software Product Line Engineering principles, e.g., allowing features to be turned on and off and periodicities to be changed, and verify different properties for each of such configuration. We automate the instantiation and verification in Uppaal of a set of selected configurations via an open-source prototype tool named Uppex.
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