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Exploiting Target Enlargement and Dynamic Abstraction within Mixed BDD and SAT Invariant Checking
Author(s) -
G. Bischoff,
Karl S. Brace,
Gianpiero Cabodi,
Sergio Nocco,
Stefano Quer
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
electronic notes in theoretical computer science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.242
H-Index - 60
ISSN - 1571-0661
DOI - 10.1016/j.entcs.2004.06.061
Subject(s) - binary decision diagram , computer science , model checking , boolean satisfiability problem , formal verification , predicate abstraction , theoretical computer science , tree traversal , boolean function , algorithm , abstraction model checking , software verification , benchmark (surveying) , programming language , functional verification , software , software development , software construction , geodesy , geography
In this paper, we propose a methodology to make Binary Decision Diagrams (BDDs) and Boolean Satisfiability (SAT) Solvers cooperate. The underlying idea is simple: We start a verification task with BDDs, we go on with them as long as the problem remains of manageable size, then we switch to SAT, without losing the work done on the BDD domain.We propose target enlargement as an attempt to bring some of the advantages of state set ma- nipulation from BDDs to SAT-based verification. We first, “enlarge” initial and target state sets of a given verification problem by affordable BDD manipulations. This step is carried on with a few breadth-first steps of traversal, or with what we call high-density dynamic abstraction, i.e., a new technique to collect under-approximate reachable state sets. Then, we perform SAT-based verification with the newly computed “enlarged” sets.We experimentally test our methodology within an industrial environment, the Intel BOolean VErifier BOVE. Preliminary results on standard benchmarks (the ISCAS'89, ISCAS'89–addendum, and VIS suites), and industrial ones (the IBM Formal Verification Benchmark Library) are provided. Results show interesting improvements over state-of-the-art techniques: We could decrease CPU time up to a 5x factor, when performing verification with the same depth, or we could increase the verification depth up to 30%, when performing verification within the same time limit

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