A Mechanically Verified Theory of Contracts

Cyber-physical systems (CPS) are assemblies of networked, heterogeneous, hardware, and software components sensing, evaluating, and actuating a physical environment. This heterogeneity induces complexity that makes CPSs challenging to model correctly. Since CPSs often have critical functions, it is...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inTheoretical Aspects of Computing - ICTAC 2021 Vol. 12819; pp. 134 - 151
Main Authors Kastenbaum, Stéphane, Boyer, Benoît, Talpin, Jean-Pierre
Format Book Chapter
LanguageEnglish
Published Switzerland Springer International Publishing AG 2021
Springer International Publishing
SeriesLecture Notes in Computer Science
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Summary:Cyber-physical systems (CPS) are assemblies of networked, heterogeneous, hardware, and software components sensing, evaluating, and actuating a physical environment. This heterogeneity induces complexity that makes CPSs challenging to model correctly. Since CPSs often have critical functions, it is however of utmost importance to formally verify them in order to provide the highest guarantees of safety. Faced with CPS complexity, model abstraction becomes paramount to make verification attainable. To this end, assume/guarantee contracts enable component model abstraction to support a sound, structured, and modular verification process. While abstractions of models by contracts are usually proved sound, none of the related contract frameworks themselves have, to the best of our knowledge, been formally proved correct so far. In this aim, we present the formalization of a generic assume/guarantee contract theory in the proof assistant Coq. We identify and prove theorems that ensure its correctness. Our theory is generic, or parametric, in that it can be instantiated and used with any given logic, in particular hybrid logics, in which highly complex cyber-physical systems can uniformly be described.
ISBN:3030853144
9783030853143
ISSN:0302-9743
1611-3349
DOI:10.1007/978-3-030-85315-0_9