Title :
Safety and liveness in branching time
Author :
Manolios, Panagiotis ; Trefler, Richard
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Comput. Sci., Texas Univ., Austin, TX, USA
Abstract :
Extends B. Alpern & F.B. Schneider´s linear time characterization of safety and liveness properties to branching time, where properties are sets of trees. We define two closure operators that give rise to the following four extremal types of properties: universally safe, existentially safe, universally live and existentially live. The distinction between universal and existential properties captures the difference between the CTL (computation tree logic) path quantifiers ∀ (for all paths) and ∃ (there is a path). We show that every branching time property is the intersection of an existentially safe property and an existentially live property, a universally safe property and a universally live property, and an existentially safe property and a universally live property. We also examine how our closure operators behave on linear-time properties. We then focus on sets of finitely branching trees and show that our closure operators agree on linear-time safety properties. Furthermore, if a set of trees is given implicitly as a Rabin tree automaton ℬ, we show that it is possible to compute the Rabin automata corresponding to the closures of the language of ℬ. This allows us to effectively compute ℬsafe and ℬlive such that the language of ℬ is the intersection of the languages of ℬsafe and ℬlive. As above, ℬsafe and ℬlive can be chosen so that their languages are existentially safe and existentially live, universally safe and universally live, or existentially safe and universally live
Keywords :
formal languages; safety; temporal logic; trees (mathematics); CTL path quantifiers; Rabin tree automaton; branching time properties; closure operators; computation tree logic; existential properties; extremal property types; finitely branching trees; intersection; language closures; linear time properties; liveness properties; safety properties; temporal logic; universal properties; Automata; Boolean algebra; Control systems; Logic functions; Protocols; Safety;
Conference_Titel :
Logic in Computer Science, 2001. Proceedings. 16th Annual IEEE Symposium on
Conference_Location :
Boston, MA
Print_ISBN :
0-7695-1281-X
DOI :
10.1109/LICS.2001.932512