scholarly journals A Decision Procedure for Separation Logic in SMT

Author(s):  
Andrew Reynolds ◽  
Radu Iosif ◽  
Cristina Serban ◽  
Tim King
1998 ◽  
Author(s):  
Clark W. Barrett ◽  
David L. Dill ◽  
Jeremy R. Levitt

2021 ◽  
Vol 31 ◽  
Author(s):  
THOMAS VAN STRYDONCK ◽  
FRANK PIESSENS ◽  
DOMINIQUE DEVRIESE

Abstract Separation logic is a powerful program logic for the static modular verification of imperative programs. However, dynamic checking of separation logic contracts on the boundaries between verified and untrusted modules is hard because it requires one to enforce (among other things) that outcalls from a verified to an untrusted module do not access memory resources currently owned by the verified module. This paper proposes an approach to dynamic contract checking by relying on support for capabilities, a well-studied form of unforgeable memory pointers that enables fine-grained, efficient memory access control. More specifically, we rely on a form of capabilities called linear capabilities for which the hardware enforces that they cannot be copied. We formalize our approach as a fully abstract compiler from a statically verified source language to an unverified target language with support for linear capabilities. The key insight behind our compiler is that memory resources described by spatial separation logic predicates can be represented at run time by linear capabilities. The compiler is separation-logic-proof-directed: it uses the separation logic proof of the source program to determine how memory accesses in the source program should be compiled to linear capability accesses in the target program. The full abstraction property of the compiler essentially guarantees that compiled verified modules can interact with untrusted target language modules as if they were compiled from verified code as well. This article is an extended version of one that was presented at ICFP 2019 (Van Strydonck et al., 2019).


2020 ◽  
Vol 4 (ICFP) ◽  
pp. 1-29
Author(s):  
Glen Mével ◽  
Jacques-Henri Jourdan ◽  
François Pottier

1992 ◽  
Vol 17 (3) ◽  
pp. 271-282
Author(s):  
Y.S. Ramakrishna ◽  
L.E. Moser ◽  
L.K. Dillon ◽  
P.M. Melliar-Smith ◽  
G. Kutty

We present an automata-theoretic decision procedure for Since/Until Temporal Logic (SUTL), a linear-time propositional temporal logic with strong non-strict since and until operators. The logic, which is intended for specifying and reasoning about computer systems, employs neither next nor previous operators. Such operators obstruct the use of hierarchical abstraction and refinement and make reasoning about concurrency difficult. A proof of the soundness and completeness of the decision procedure is given, and its complexity is analyzed.


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