Partial-Order Reduction for General State Exploring Algorithms
Author(s) -
Dragan Bošnački,
Stefan Leue,
Alberto Lluch Lafuente
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
lecture notes in computer science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Book series
eISSN - 1611-3349
pISSN - 0302-9743
DOI - 10.1007/11691617_16
Subject(s) - partial order reduction , reduction (mathematics) , computer science , benchmark (surveying) , counterexample , set (abstract data type) , state (computer science) , algorithm , model checking , state space , order (exchange) , closed set , theoretical computer science , mathematics , discrete mathematics , programming language , statistics , geometry , geodesy , finance , economics , geography
An important component of partial-order based reduction algorithms is the condition that prevents action ignoring, commonly known as the cycle proviso. In this paper we give a new version of this proviso that is applicable to a general search algorithm skeleton also known as the General State Expanding Algorithm (GSEA). GSEA maintains a set of open (visited but not expanded) states from which states are iteratively selected for exploration and moved to a closed set of states (visited and expanded). Depending on the open set data structure used, GSEA can be instantiated as depth-first, breadth-first, or a directed search algorithm. The proviso is characterized by reference to the open and closed set of states in GSEA. As a result the proviso can be computed in an efficient manner during the search based on local information. We implemented partial-order reduction for GSEA based on our proposed proviso in the tool HSF-SPIN, which is an extension of the model checker SPIN for directed model checking. We evaluate the state space reduction achieved by partial-order reduction according to the proviso that we propose by comparing it on a set of benchmark problems to other reduction approaches. We also compare the use of breadth-first search and A*, two algorithms ensuring that counterexamples of minimal length will be found, together with the proviso that we propose.\ud
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