* src/ltlparse/public.hh: Rename as... * src/tl/parse.hh: ... this. * src/ltlparse/: Rename as... * src/parsetl/: ... this. * NEWS: Mention the change. * README, configure.ac, doc/org/tut01.org, doc/org/tut02.org, doc/org/tut03.org, doc/org/tut10.org, src/Makefile.am, src/bin/common_finput.cc, src/bin/common_finput.hh, src/bin/ltl2tgta.cc, src/kripkeparse/kripkeparse.yy, src/parseaut/parseaut.yy, src/tests/checkpsl.cc, src/tests/checkta.cc, src/tests/complementation.cc, src/tests/consterm.cc, src/tests/emptchk.cc, src/tests/equalsf.cc, src/tests/ikwiad.cc, src/tests/kind.cc, src/tests/length.cc, src/tests/ltlprod.cc, src/tests/ltlrel.cc, src/tests/randtgba.cc, src/tests/readltl.cc, src/tests/reduc.cc, src/tests/syntimpl.cc, src/tests/tostring.cc, src/tl/Makefile.am, src/twaalgos/lbtt.cc, wrap/python/spot_impl.i, iface/ltsmin/modelcheck.cc: Adjust.
4.6 KiB
Translating an LTL formula into a never claim
Here is how to translate an LTL (or PSL) formula into a never claim.
Shell
ltl2tgba --spin 'GFa -> GFb'
never { /* F(GFb | G!a) */
T0_init:
if
:: ((!(a))) -> goto accept_S0
:: ((true)) -> goto T0_init
:: ((b)) -> goto accept_S2
fi;
accept_S0:
if
:: ((!(a))) -> goto accept_S0
fi;
accept_S2:
if
:: ((b)) -> goto accept_S2
:: ((!(b))) -> goto T0_S3
fi;
T0_S3:
if
:: ((b)) -> goto accept_S2
:: ((!(b))) -> goto T0_S3
fi;
}
Python
The formula function returns a formula object (or raises a
parse-error exception). Formula objects have a translate() method
that returns an automaton, and the automata objects have a to_str
method that can output in one of the supported syntaxes.
So the translation is actually a one-liner in Python:
import spot
print(spot.formula('GFa -> GFb').translate('BA').to_str('spin'))
never {
T0_init:
if
:: ((!(a))) -> goto accept_S0
:: ((true)) -> goto T0_init
:: ((b)) -> goto accept_S2
fi;
accept_S0:
if
:: ((!(a))) -> goto accept_S0
fi;
accept_S2:
if
:: ((b)) -> goto accept_S2
:: ((!(b))) -> goto T0_S3
fi;
T0_S3:
if
:: ((b)) -> goto accept_S2
:: ((!(b))) -> goto T0_S3
fi;
}
The above line can actually be made a bit shorter, because
translate() can also be used as a function (as opposed to a method)
that takes a formula (possibly as a string) as first argument:
import spot
print(spot.translate('GFa -> GFb', 'BA').to_str('spin'))
never {
T0_init:
if
:: ((!(a))) -> goto accept_S0
:: ((true)) -> goto T0_init
:: ((b)) -> goto accept_S2
fi;
accept_S0:
if
:: ((!(a))) -> goto accept_S0
fi;
accept_S2:
if
:: ((b)) -> goto accept_S2
:: ((!(b))) -> goto T0_S3
fi;
T0_S3:
if
:: ((b)) -> goto accept_S2
:: ((!(b))) -> goto T0_S3
fi;
}
C++
All the translation pipeline (this include simplifying the formula,
translating the simplified formula into an automaton, and simplifying
the resulting automaton) is handled by the spot::translator object.
This object can configured by calling set_type() to chose the type
of automaton to output, set_level() to set the level of optimization
(it's high by default), and set_pref() to set various preferences
(like small or deterministic) or characteristic (complete,
unambiguous) for the resulting automaton. Finally, the output as a
never claim is done via the print_never_claim function.
#include <string>
#include <iostream>
#include "tl/parse.hh"
#include "tl/print.hh"
#include "twaalgos/translate.hh"
#include "twaalgos/neverclaim.hh"
int main()
{
std::string input = "[]<>p0 || <>[]p1";
spot::parse_error_list pel;
spot::formula f = spot::parse_infix_psl(input, pel);
if (spot::format_parse_errors(std::cerr, input, pel))
return 1;
spot::translator trans;
trans.set_type(spot::postprocessor::BA);
spot::twa_graph_ptr aut = trans.run(f);
print_never_claim(std::cout, aut) << '\n';
return 0;
}
never {
T0_init:
if
:: ((p1)) -> goto accept_S0
:: ((true)) -> goto T0_init
:: ((p0)) -> goto accept_S2
fi;
accept_S0:
if
:: ((p1)) -> goto accept_S0
fi;
accept_S2:
if
:: ((p0)) -> goto accept_S2
:: ((!(p0))) -> goto T0_S3
fi;
T0_S3:
if
:: ((p0)) -> goto accept_S2
:: ((!(p0))) -> goto T0_S3
fi;
}
Additional comments
The Python version of translate() is documented as follows:
import spot
help(spot.translate)
Help on function translate in module spot:
translate(formula, *args)
Translate a formula into an automaton.
Keep in mind that pref expresses just a preference that may not be
satisfied.
The optional arguments should be strings among the following:
- at most one in 'TGBA', 'BA', or 'Monitor'
(type of automaton to build)
- at most one in 'Small', 'Deterministic', 'Any'
(preferred characteristics of the produced automaton)
- at most one in 'Low', 'Medium', 'High'
(optimization level)
- any combination of 'Complete', 'Unambiguous', and
'StateBasedAcceptance' (or 'SBAcc' for short)
The default correspond to 'tgba', 'small' and 'high'.