Formal Specification and Verification of Safety-Critical Software
Licentiate thesis, 2006

This thesis is about formal specification and formal verification of software and consists of three different parts. In the first two parts, the formal specification language OCL is treated in two different contexts. The third part describes a technique for analysing the consequences of hardware faults as part of formal software verification. The first part describes the development of OCL specifications for all classes and interfaces in JAVA CARD API 2.2, a set of library classes/interfaces used when programming JAVA CARD programs. The primary purpose of the specifications is to support formal verification of JAVA CARD programs in the KeY tool, but the formal documentation itself can also be useful for programmers using the API. The second part of the thesis considers different aspects of simplifying OCL specifications that have been automatically generated. One specific context is examined: a CASE tool equipped with a design pattern instantiation mechanism that, besides generating UML diagrams, also generates OCL constraints. These constraints capture certain properties of the design pattern. OCL constraints that are automatically generated from generic patterns tend to contain redundancies. These redundancies reduce their readability and they therefore need to be simplified. An approach for OCL simplification based on rewriting is presented. The third part describes a technique for formal verification of software where the ability to analyse hardware faults has been introduced. An approach for formal software verification based on symbolic program execution is extended so that hardware faults can be represented in a symbolic way. These simulated hardware faults can be introduced during symbolic execution, and it then becomes possible to calculate the exact consequences of certain hardware faults or prove that a program tolerates these faults.

fault injection

fault tolerance

safety-critical

dependability

formal verification

Formal specification


Author

Daniel Larsson

Chalmers, Computer Science and Engineering (Chalmers), Computing Science (Chalmers)

Specifying Java Card API in OCL

OCL 2.0 Workshop at UML 2003 Conference,; Vol. 102(2004)p. 3-19

Paper in proceeding

Simplifying Transformations of OCL Constraints

Proceedings of MoDELS 2005, Lecture Notes in Computer Science,; Vol. 3713(2005)p. 309-323

Paper in proceeding

Subject Categories

Computer Science

Technical report L - Department of Computer Science and Engineering, Chalmers University of Technology and Göteborg University: 31L

More information

Created

10/7/2017