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NAME
pan - Spin generated source for a model-specific verifier.
DESCRIPTION
Overview of options that are available with the verifiers
generated by Spin with Spin's run-time
option -a. There are two groups of options: those that
are available after the verifier source in pan.c has been compiled,
and those that are available at compilation time.
The reason for the split is that knowledge of some options at
compile time can be used to produce a more efficient verification
system.
Attached is also a brief explanation of the numbers that are
printed by the verifiers at the end of a run.
A Run-Time Options for Pan
-
-a
find acceptance cycles (available if compiled without -DNP)
-
-cN
stop at Nth error (defaults to first error if N is absent)
-
-d
print state tables and stop
-
-e
create trails for all errors encountered (default is first one only)
-
-f
add weak fairness (to -a or -l)
-
-hN
choose another hash-function, with N: 1..32 (defaults to 1)
-
-i
search for shortest path to error (causes an increase of complexity)
-
-I
like -i, but approximate and faster
-
-J
reverse the evaluation order of nested unless statements (to conform
to the one used in Java)
-
-l
find non-progress cycles (requires compilation with -DNP)
-
-mN
set max search depth to N steps (default N=10000)
-
-n
no listing of unreached states at the end of the run
-
-q
require empty channels in valid endstates
-
-s
use 1-bit hashing (default is 2-bit hashing, assumes compilation -DBITSTATE)
-
-V
print Spin version number and stop
-
-wN
use ahashtable of 2^N entries(defaults to -w18)
B Compile Time Options for Spin and Pan
The directives are grouped in eight sets, depending on
their main purpose.
There are four directives that can be used for
compiling the Spin sources itself. These should never
be needed by Spin users, only (once) by someone
recompiling and installing Spin from its sources.
Directives for Compiling Spin itself
NXT
| if defined, the NEXT operator X can be used
in LTL formulae; risky, not compatible with partial
order reductions |
PC
| required when compiling Spin on a PC |
PRINTF
| if defined, printf statements in the model are enabled
during the verification process (not recommended) |
SOLARIS
| required when compiling Spin on a Solaris system |
The next tables give optional directives for compiling
the verifiers that are generated by Spin. Traditionally these
are stored in a file named pan.c (with a number of dependent files).
Usage of the directives below is
always optional, and typically of the form:
$ spin -a spec
$ cc -o pan -DNOBOUNDCHECK pan.c
Each directive modifies the default behavior of the verifier
to achieve a specific effect noted in the tables below.
Directives Supported by Xspin
BITSTATE
| use supertrace/bitstate instead of exhaustive exploration |
MEMCNT=N
| set upperbound to the amount of memory that can be allocated
usage, e.g.: -DMEMCNT=20 for a maximum of 2^20 bytes |
MEMLIM=N
| set upperbound to the true number of Megabytes that can be
allocated; usage, e.g.: -DMEMLIM=200 for a maximum of 200 Megabytes
(meant to be a simple alternative to MEMCNT)
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NOCLAIM
| exclude the never claim from the verification, if present |
NOFAIR
| disable the code for weak-fairness (is faster) |
NOREDUCE
| disables the partial order reduction algorithm |
NP
| enable non-progress cycle detection (option -l),
replacing option -a for acceptance cycle detection |
PEG
| add complexity profiling (transition counts) |
SAFETY
| optimize for the case where no cycle detection is needed
(faster, uses less memory, disables both -l and -a) |
VAR_RANGES
| compute the effective value range of variables
(restricted to the interval 0..255) |
CHECK
| generate debugging information (see also DEBUG) |
Directives Related to Partial Order Reduction
CTL
| allow only those reductions that are consistent with
branching time logics like CTL (i.e., the persistent
set contains either one or all transitions) |
GLOB_ALPHA
| consider process death a global action (for compatibility
with versions of Spin between 2.8.5 and 2.9.7) |
NIBIS
| apply a small optimization of partial order reduction
(sometimes faster, sometimes not...) |
NOREDUCE
| disables the partial order reduction algorithm |
XUSAFE
| disable validity checks of x[rs] assertions (faster,
and sometimes useful if the check is too strict, e.g.
when channels are passed around as process parameters) |
Directives to Increase Speed
NOBOUNDCHECK
| don't check array bound violations (faster) |
NOCOMP
| don't compress states with fullstate storage
(faster, but not compatible with liveness unless -DBITSTATE) |
NOFAIR
| disable the code for weak-fairness (is faster) |
NOSTUTTER
| disable stuttering rules (warning: changes semantics)
stuttering rules are the standard way to extend a finite
execution sequence into and infinite one, to allow for
a consistent interpretation of B\(u"chi acceptance rules |
SAFETY
| optimize for the case where no cycle detection is needed
(faster, uses less memory, disables both -l and -a) |
Directives to Reduce Memory Use
BITSTATE
| use supertrace/bitstate instead of exhaustive exploration |
HC
| a state vector compression mode; collapses state vector sizes
down to 32+16 bits and stores them in conventional hash-table
(a version of Wolper's hash-compact method -- new in version 3.2.2.)
Variations: HC0, HC1, HC2, HC3 for 32, 40, 48, or 56 bits respectively.
The default is equivalent to HC2. |
COLLAPSE
| a state vector compression mode; collapses state vector sizes
by up to 80% to 90% (see Spin97 workshop paper)
variations: add -DSEPQS or -DJOINPROCS (off by default) |
MA=N
| use a minimized DFA encoding for the state space, similar
to a BDD, assuming a maximum of N bytes in the state-vector
(this can be combined with -DCOLLAPSE for greater effect in
cases when the original state vector is long) |
MEMCNT=N
| set upperbound to the amount of memory that can be allocated
usage, e.g.: -DMEMCNT=20 for a maximum of 2^20 bytes |
MEMLIM=N
| set upperbound to the true number of Megabytes that can be
allocated; usage, e.g.: -DMEMLIM=200 for a maximum of 200 Megabytes
(meant to be a simple alternative to MEMCNT)
|
SC
| enables stack cycling. this will swap parts of a very long
search stack to a diskfile during verifications. the runtime flag -m
for setting the size of the search stack still remains, but now
sets the size of the part of the stack that remains in core.
it is meant for rare applications where the search stack is many
millions of states deep and eats up the majority of the memory
requirements.
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Directives Reserved for Use When Prompted by Pan
NFAIR=N
| allocates memory for enforcing weak fairness
usage, e.g.: -DNFAIR=3 (default is 2) |
VECTORSZ=N
| allocates memory (in bytes) for state vector
usage, e.g.: -DVECTORSZ=2048 (default is 1024) |
Directives For Debugging Pan Verifiers
VERBOSE
| adds elaborate debugging printouts |
CHECK
| more frugal debugging printouts |
SVDUMP
| if defined, adds an option -pN to the runtime verifiers to
produce a file sv_dump at the end of the run, with a
binary representation of all states, using a fixed size of
N bytes per state. (see also SDUMP below) |
SDUMP
| if used in addition to CHECK: adds ascii dumps of state vectors
to verbose output (i.e., an ascii version of SVDUMP) |
Directives For Experimental Use
BCOMP
| when in BITSTATE mode, this computes hash functions over
the compressed state-vector (compressed with byte-masking)
in some cases, this can improve the coverage |
COVEST
| compiles in extra code for giving a coverage estimate
at the end of BITSTATE runs, defined by Uli Stern.
must compile pan.c with -lm in this case |
HYBRID_HASH
| can shave a word (4 bytes) from every state vector,
in 25% of the cases...
when the state vector is 1 byte longer than a multiple of 4
the memory allocator ends up adding 3 dummy bytes to secure
memory alignment. to avoid this, the HYBRID_HASH mode will
take away 1 byte from the state vector, and use it as part
of the hash -- this causes more collisions, but preserves
correct exhaustive exploration - and saves 4 bytes per stored
state in memory... |
LC
| to be used in combination with BITSTATE hashing only.
it is automatically enabled when -DSC is used in BITSTATE mode.
LC forces the use of hashcompact compression for stackstates
(instead of the dedault which is full-state storage for states
while they are on the search stack, even in bitstate mode).
it slows down the search, but can save memory. it uses 4 bytes
per state (giving very low probability of collision).
|
NOVSZ
| risky - removes 4 bytes from state vector - its length field.
in most cases this is redundant - so when memory is
tight in fullstate storage, try this mode.
if the number of states stored changes when -DNOVSZ is
used, the information wasn't redundant... (safety checks
will still be valid, but liveness checks may then fail)
NOVSZ cannot be combined with COLLAPSE |
PRINTF
| enables printfs during verification runs (Version 2.8
and later -- earlier versions always left these enabled) |
RANDSTORE
| when in BITSTATE mode, use for instance -DRANDSTORE=33 to
reduce the probability of storing the bits in the hasharray
to 33%. the value assigned must be between 0 and 99
low values increase the amount of work done (time complexity)
and increase the effective coverage for large state spaces.
most useful in sequential bitstate hashing runs to improve
the accumulative coverage of all runs significantly |
REACH
| guarantee absence of errors within the -m depth-limit
(described in more detail in Newsletter 4 and in
the V2.Updates notes for Version 2.2.) |
W_XPT=N
| in combination with MA, write checkpoint files every multiple
of N states stored |
R_XPT
| in combination with MA, restart a verification run from the
last checkpoint file written, can be combined with W_XPT |
C Pan's Output Format
A typical printout of a verification run is as follows:
$ pan
(Spin Version 3.0.alpha -- 21 July 1997)
+ Partial Order Reduction
Full statespace search for:
never-claim - (none specified)
assertion violations +
acceptance cycles - (not selected)
invalid endstates +
State-vector 32 byte, depth reached 13, errors: 0
74 states, stored
30 states, matched
104 transitions (= stored+matched)
1 atomic steps
hash conflicts: 2 (resolved)
(max size 2^18 states)
1.533 memory usage (Mbyte)
unreached in proctype ProcA
line 7, state 8, "Gaap = 4"
(1 of 13 states)
unreached in proctype :init:
line 21, state 14, "Gaap = 3"
line 21, state 14, "Gaap = 4"
(1 of 19 states)
This is what each line in this listing means:
(Spin Version 3.0.alpha -- 21 July 1997)
Identifies the version of Spin that generated the
pan.c source from which this verifier was compiled.
+ Partial Order Reduction
The plus sign means that the default partial order reduction
algorithm was used. A minus sign would indicate compilation
for exhaustive, non-reduced, verification with option -DNOREDUCE .
Full statespace search for:
Indicates the type of search. The default is a full statespace
search. Large models can also be verified with a
Bitstate
search, which is approximate.
never-claim - (none specified)
The minus sign indicates that no never
claim, or LTL fomrula was used for this run. If a never
claim was part of the model, it could have been suppressed with
the compiler directive -DNOCLAIM .
assertion violations +
The plus indicates that the search checked for violations of
user specified assertions, which is the default.
acceptance cycles - (not selected)
The minus indicates that the search did not check for the presence
of acceptance or non-progress cycles. To do so would require a
run-time option -a or compilation with -DNP
combined with the run-time option -l.
invalid endstates +
The plus indicates that a check for invalid endstates was
done (i.e., for absence of deadlocks).
State-vector 32 byte, depth reached 13, errors: 0
The complete description of a global system state required
32 bytes of memory (per state). The longest depth-first search
path contained 13 transitions from the root of the tree (i.e.,
from the initial system state). No errors were found in this
search.
74 states, stored
A total of 74 unique global system states were stored in the
statespace (each represented effectively by a vector of 32 bytes).
30 states, matched
In 30 cases did the search return to a previously visited state
in the search tree.
104 transitions (= stored+matched)
A total of 104 transitions were explored in the search,
which can serve as a statistic for the amount of work
that has been performed to complete the verification.
1 atomic steps
One of the transitions was part of an atomic sequence, all
others were outside atomic sequences.
hash conflicts: 2 (resolved)
In 2 cases the default hashing scheme (a weaker version than
what is used in bitstate hashing) encountered a collision, and
had to place the states into a linked list in the hash-table.
(max size 2^18 states)
The (perhaps default) argument that was specified for the size
of the hash-table was 2^18; equivalent to a run-time option -w18.
1.533 memory usage (Mbyte)
Total memory usage was 1.533 Megabytes, including the stack, the
hashtable, and all related data structures. Memory use would go
down for smaller than the default choices for run-time options
-m and -w,
which could in this case, with only 74 reachable states of 32
bytes each, considerably reduce memory use.
unreached in proctype ProcA
line 7, state 8, "Gaap = 4"
(1 of 13 states)
unreached in proctype :init:
line 21, state 14, "Gaap = 3"
(1 of 19 states)
A listing of the state numbers and approximate line numbers
for the basic statements in the specification that were not
reached. Since this is a full statespace search that ran to
completion this means that these transitions are effectively
unreachable (dead code).
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