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Voogie

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Vampire meets Boogie!

Voogie reads simple Boogie programs and generates their verification conditions as formulas in the FOOL logic. These formulas are written in the TPTP language and can be checked by automated first-order theorem provers. Currently, only the Vampire theorem prover fully supports FOOL.

E. Kotelnikov, L. Kovacs, and A. Voronkov. A FOOLish Encoding of the Next State Relations of Imperative Programs. In Proceedings of the 9th International Joint Conference on Automated Reasoning, pages 405–421, 2018.

Voogie is not a full-blown program verifier. Its goal is to explore which extensions of first-order logic are adequate for naturally representing fragments of imperative programs.

The current version of Voogie supports the following features of Boogie.

  • Types int, bool, nested and multi-dimentional arrays (e.g. [int] int, [int,int] int, [int][int] int).
  • Top level variable definitions.
  • Expressions, built with
    • arithmetic operators +, -, *, div,
    • comparison operators ==, !=, >, <, >=, <=, and
    • logical connectives !, &&, ||.
  • Assignments to variables (e.g. x := 0), parallel assignments to variables (e.g. x, y := y, x), and assignments to array elements (e.g. a[0] := 1, b[0][0] := 1, c[0,1] := 1).
  • if statements
  • A single procedure main, possibly annotated with pre-conditions using the keyword requires and post-conditions using the keyword ensures.

Voogie is written in Haskell and must be built with GHC and Cabal. Run cabal install to compile and install Voogie.

$ cat examples/simple.bpl
var a: [int] int;
var x, y: int;

procedure main()
  modifies x, y;
  ensures x + y == 2;
 {
  x := 0;
  y := 0;
  if (a[0] > 0) x := x + 1; else y := y + 1;
  if (a[1] > 0) x := x + 1; else y := y + 1;
}

See the examples dir for more examples.

$ voogie examples/simple.bpl
tff(a, type, a : $array($int, $int)).
tff(x, type, x : $int).
tff(y, type, y : $int).
tff(voogie_conjecture, conjecture,
    $let(x : $int,
         x := 0,
    $let(y : $int,
         y := 0,
    $let([y : $int, x : $int],
         [y, x] := $ite($greater($select(a, 0), 0),
                        $let(x : $int,
                             x := $sum(x, 1),
                             [y, x]),
                        $let(y : $int,
                             y := $sum(y, 1),
                             [y, x])),
    $let([y : $int, x : $int],
         [y, x] := $ite($greater($select(a, 1), 0),
                        $let(x : $int,
                             x := $sum(x, 1),
                             [y, x]),
                        $let(y : $int,
                             y := $sum(y, 1),
                             [y, x])),
         ($sum(x, y) = 2)))))).

This is a TPTP encoding of the partial correctness property of examples/simple.bpl. You can use Vampire to verify this property.

$ voogie examples/simple.bpl | vampire -newcnf on -p off
% Refutation found. Thanks to Tanya!
% SZS status Theorem for
% ------------------------------
% Version: Vampire 4.0 (commit 47e86a8 on 2017-10-30 07:14:35 -0500)
% Termination reason: Refutation

% Memory used [KB]: 5628
% Time elapsed: 0.036 s
% ------------------------------
% ------------------------------

Voogie was developed by Evgenii Kotelnikov.

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