spot/doc/org/tut02.org
Alexandre Duret-Lutz 22f442f758 parsetl: change the interface to return a parsed_formula
This gets the interface of all the functions parsing formula in line
with the interface of the automaton parser: both return a "parsed_*"
object (parsed_formula or parsed_automaton) that contains the said
object and its list of errors.  Doing so avoid having to declare the
parse_error_list in advance.

* spot/tl/parse.hh, spot/parsetl/parsetl.yy: Do the change.
* spot/parsetl/fmterror.cc: Adjust the error printer.
* NEWS: Document it.
* bin/common_finput.cc, bin/common_finput.hh, bin/ltlcross.cc,
bin/ltldo.cc, bin/ltlfilt.cc, doc/org/tut01.org, doc/org/tut02.org,
doc/org/tut10.org, doc/org/tut20.org, python/ajax/spotcgi.in,
python/spot/impl.i, spot/parseaut/parseaut.yy, tests/core/checkpsl.cc,
tests/core/checkta.cc, tests/core/consterm.cc, tests/core/emptchk.cc,
tests/core/equalsf.cc, tests/core/ikwiad.cc, tests/core/kind.cc,
tests/core/length.cc, tests/core/ltlprod.cc, tests/core/ltlrel.cc,
tests/core/randtgba.cc, tests/core/readltl.cc, tests/core/reduc.cc,
tests/core/safra.cc, tests/core/syntimpl.cc, tests/core/tostring.cc,
tests/ltsmin/modelcheck.cc, tests/python/alarm.py,
tests/python/interdep.py, tests/python/ltl2tgba.py,
tests/python/ltlparse.py: Adjust all uses.
2016-02-17 20:31:58 +01:00

4.1 KiB

Relabeling Formulas

The task is to read an LTL formula, relabel all (possibly complex) atomic propositions, and provide #define statements for each of these renamings, writing everything in Spin's syntax.

Shell

ltlfilt -ps --relabel=pnn --define -f '"Proc@Here" U ("var > 10" | "var < 4")'
#define p0 (Proc@Here)
#define p1 (var < 4)
#define p2 (var > 10)
(p0) U ((p1) || (p2))

When is this output interesting, you may ask? It is useful for instance if you want to call ltl2ba (or any other LTL-to-Büchi translator) using a formula with complex atomic propositions it cannot parse. Then you can pass the rewritten formula to ltl2ba, and prepend all those #define to its output. For instance:

ltlfilt -ps --relabel=pnn --define=tmp.defs -f '"Proc@Here" U ("var > 10" | "var < 4")' >tmp.ltl
cat tmp.defs; ltl2ba -F tmp.ltl
rm tmp.defs tmp.ltl
#define p0 (Proc@Here)
#define p1 (var < 4)
#define p2 (var > 10)
never { /* (p0) U ((p1) || (p2))
 */
T0_init:
	if
	:: (p0) -> goto T0_init
	:: (p1) || (p2) -> goto accept_all
	fi;
accept_all:
	skip
}

Python

The spot.relabel function takes an optional third parameter that should be a relabeling_map. If supplied, this map is filled with pairs of atomic propositions of the form (new-name, old-name).

import spot
f = spot.formula('"Proc@Here" U ("var > 10" | "var < 4")')
m = spot.relabeling_map()
g = spot.relabel(f, spot.Pnn, m)
for newname, oldname in m.items():
  print("#define {} ({})".format(newname.to_str(), oldname.to_str('spin', True)))
print(g.to_str('spin', True))
#define p0 ((Proc@Here))
#define p1 ((var < 4))
#define p2 ((var > 10))
(p0) U ((p1) || (p2))

C++

The spot::relabeling_map is just a std::map with a custom destructor.

  #include <string>
  #include <iostream>
  #include <spot/tl/parse.hh>
  #include <spot/tl/print.hh>
  #include <spot/tl/relabel.hh>

  int main()
  {
    std::string input = "\"Proc@Here\" U (\"var > 10\" | \"var < 4\")";
    spot::parsed_formula pf = spot::parse_infix_psl(input);
    if (pf.format_errors(std::cerr))
      return 1;
    spot::formula f = pf.f;
    spot::relabeling_map m;
    f = spot::relabel(f, spot::Pnn, &m);
    for (auto& i: m)
      {
        std::cout << "#define " << i.first << " (";
        print_spin_ltl(std::cout, i.second, true) << ")\n";
      }
    print_spin_ltl(std::cout, f, true) << '\n';
    return 0;
  }
#define p0 (Proc@Here)
#define p1 (var < 4)
#define p2 (var > 10)
(p0) U ((p1) || (p2))

Additional comments

Two ways to name atomic propositions

Instead of --relabel=pnn (or spot.Pnn, or spot::Pnn), you can actually use --relabel=abc (or spot.Abc, or spot::Abc) to have the atomic propositions named a, b, c, etc.

Relabeling Boolean sub-expressions

Instead of relabeling each atomic proposition, you could decide to relabel each Boolean sub-expression:

ltlfilt -ps --relabel-bool=pnn --define -f '"Proc@Here" U ("var > 10" | "var < 4")'
#define p0 (Proc@Here)
#define p1 ((var < 4) || (var > 10))
(p0) U (p1)

The relabeling routine is smart enough to not give different names to Boolean expressions that have some sub-expression in common.

For instance a U (a & b) will not be relabeled into (p0) U (p1) because that would hide the fact that both p0 and p1 check for a. Instead we get this:

ltlfilt -ps --relabel-bool=pnn --define -f 'a U (a & b)'
#define p0 (a)
#define p1 (b)
(p0) U ((p0) && (p1))

This "Boolean sub-expression" relabeling is available in Python and C++ via the relabel_bse function. The interface is identical to relabel.