spot/NEWS
Alexandre Duret-Lutz e997676c3e Support LBT formula in ltl2tgba.html.
Suggested by Joachim Klein.

* wrap/python/ajax/spot.in: Try parse_lbt() when parse() fails.
* NEWS: Mention it.
2014-08-20 23:10:01 +02:00

1459 lines
66 KiB
Text

New in spot 1.2.4a (not yet released)
* New feature:
- The online ltl2tgba translator will automatically attempt to
parse a formula using LBT's syntax if it cannot parse it using
the normal infix syntax.
* Documentation:
- The man page for ltl2tgba has some new notes and references
about TGBA and about monitors.
* Bug fixes:
- Fix incorrect simplification of promises in the translation
of the M operator (you may suffer from the bug even if you do
not use this operator as some LTL patterns are automatically
reduced to it).
- Fix simplification of bounded repetition in SERE formulas.
- Fix parsing of neverclaims produced by Modella.
- Fix a memory leak in the little-used conversion from
transition-based alternating automata to tgba.
- Fix a harmless uninitialized read in BuDDy.
- When writing to the terminal, ltlcross used to display each
formula in bright white, to make them stand out. It turns out
this was actually hiding the formulas for people using a
terminal with white background... This version displays formula
in bright blue instead.
New in spot 1.2.4 (2014-05-15)
* New features:
- "-B -x degen-lskip" can be used to disable level-skipping in the
degeralization procedure called by ltl2tgba and dstar2tgba.
This is mostly meant for running experiments.
- "-B -x degen-lcache=N" can be used to experiment with different
type of level caching during degeneralization.
* Bug fixes:
- Change the Python bindings to make them compatible with Swig 3.0.
- "ltl2tgta --ta" could crash in certain conditions due to the
introduction of a simulation-based reduction after
degeneralization.
- Fix four incorrect formula-simplification rules, three were
related to the factorization of Boolean subformulas in
operands of the non-length-matching "&" SERE operator, and
a fourth one could only be enabled by explicitely passing the
favor_event_univ option to the simplifier (not the default).
- Fix incorrect translation of the fusion operator (":") in SERE
such as {xx;1}:yy[*] where the left operand has 1 as tail.
New in spot 1.2.3 (2014-02-11)
* New features:
- The SPOT_SATLOG environment variable can be set to a filename to
obtain statistics about the different iterations of the
SAT-based minimization. For an example, see
http://spot.lip6.fr/userdoc/satmin.html
- The bench/dtgbasat/ benchmark has been updated to use SPOT_SATLOG
and record more statistics.
- The default value for the SPOT_SATSOLVER environment
variable has been changed to "glucose -verb=0 -model %I >%O".
This assumes that glucose 3.0 is installed. For older
versions of glucose, remove the "-model" option.
* Bug fixes:
- More fixes for Python 3 compatibility.
- Fix calculation of length_boolone(), were 'Xa|b|c' was
considered as length 6 instead of 4 (because it is 'Xa|(b|a)'
were (b|a) is Boolean).
- Fix Clang-3.5 warnings.
- randltl -S did not honor --boolean-priorities.
- randltl had trouble generating formulas when all unary, or
all binary/n-ary operators were disabled.
- Fix spurious testsuite failure when using Pandas 0.13.
- Add the time spent in child processes when measuring time
with the timer class.
- Fix determinism of the SAT-based minimization encoding.
(It would sometimes produce different equivalent automata,
because of a different encoding order.)
- If the SAT-based minimization is asked for a 10-state automaton
and returns a 6-state automaton, do not ask for a 9-state
automaton in the next iteration...
- Fix some compilation issue with the version of Apple's Clang
that is installed with MacOS X 10.9.
- Fix VPATH builds when building from the git repository.
- Fix UP links in the html documentation for command-line tools.
New in spot 1.2.2 (2014-01-24)
* Bug fixes:
- Fix compilation *and* behavior of bitvectors on 32-bit
architectures.
- Fix some compilation errors observed using the antique G++ 4.0.1.
- Fix compatibility with Python 3 in the test suite.
- Fix a couple of new clang warnings (like "unused private member").
- Add some missing #includes that are not included indirectly
when the C++ compiler is in C++11 mode.
- Fix detection of numbers that are too large in the ELTL parser.
- Fix a memory leak in the ELTL parser, and avoid some unnecessary
calls to strlen() at the same time.
New in spot 1.2.1 (2013-12-11)
* New features:
- commands for translators specified to ltlcross can now
be given "short names" to be used in the CSV or JSON output.
For instance
ltlcross '{small} ltl2tgba -s --small %f >%N' ...
will run the command "ltl2tgba -s --small %f >%N", but only
print "small" in output files.
- ltlcross' CSV and JSON output now contains two additional
columns: exit_status and exit_code, used to report failures of
the translator. If the translation failed, only the time is
reported, and the rest of the statistics, which are missing,
area left empty (in CVS) or null (in JSON). A new option,
--omit-missing can be used to remove lines for failed
translations, and remove these two columns.
- if ltlcross is used with --products=+5 instead of --products=5
then the stastics for each of the five products will be output
separately instead of being averaged.
- if ltlcross is used with tools that produce deterministic Streett
or Rabin automata (as specified with %D), then the statistics
output in CSV or JSON will have some extra columns to report
the size of these input automata before ltlcross converts them
into TGBA to perform its regular checks.
- ltlfilt, ltl2tgba, ltl2tgta, and ltlcross can now read formulas
from CSV files. Use option -F FILE/COL to read formulas from
column COL of FILE. Use -F FILE/-COL if the first line of
FILE be ignored.
- when ltlfilt processes formulas from a CSV file, it will output
each CSV line whose formula matches the given constraints, with
the rewriten formula. The new escape sequence %< (text in
columns before the formula) and %> (text after) can be used
with the --format option to alter this output.
- ltlfile, genltl, randltl, and ltl2tgba have a --csv-escape option
to help escape formulas in CSV files.
- Please check
http://spot.lip6.fr/userdoc/csv.html
for some discussion and examples of the last few features.
* Bug fixes:
- ltlcross' CSV output has been changed to be more RFC 4180
compliant: it no longuer output useless cosmetic spaces, and
use double-quotes with proper escaping for strings. The only
RFC 4180 rule that it does not follow is that it will terminate
lines with \n instead of \r\n because the latter cause issues
with a couple of tools.
- ltlcross failed to report missing input or output escape sequences
on all but the first configured translator.
New in spot 1.2 (2013-10-01)
* Changes to command-line tools:
- ltlcross has a new option --color to color its output. It is
enabled by default when the output is a terminal.
- ltlcross will give an example of infinite word accepted by the
two automata when the product between a positive automaton and a
negative automaton is non-empty.
- ltlcross can now read the Rabin and Streett automata output by
ltl2dstar. This type of output should be specified using '%D':
ltlcross 'ltl2dstar --ltl2nba=spin:path/to/ltl2tgba@-s %L %D'
However because Spot only supports Büchi acceptance, these Rabin
and Streett automata are immediately converted to TGBAs before
further processing by ltlcross. This is still interesting to
search for bugs in translators to Rabin or Streett automata, but
the statistics (of the resulting TGBAs) might not be very relevant.
- When ltlcross obtains a deterministic automaton from a
translator it will now complement this automaton to perform
additional intersection checks. This is complementation is done
only for deterministic automata (because that is cheap) and can
be disabled with --no-complement.
- To help with debugging problems detected by ltlcross, the
environment variables SPOT_TMPDIR and SPOT_TMPKEEP control where
temporary files are created and if they should be erased. Read
the man page of ltlcross for details.
- There is a new command, named dstar2tgba, that converts a
deterministic Rabin or Streett automaton (expressed in the
output format of ltl2dstar) into a TGBA, BA or Monitor.
In the case of Rabin acceptance, the conversion will output a
deterministic Büchi automaton if one such automaton exist. Even
if no such automaton exists, the conversion will actually
preserves the determinism of any SCC that can be kept
deterministic.
In the case of Streett acceptance, the conversion produces
non-deterministic Büchi automata with Generalized acceptance.
These are then degeneralized if requested.
See http://spot.lip6.fr/userdoc/dstar2tgba.html for some
examples, and the man page for more reference.
- The %S escape sequence used by ltl2tgba --stats to display the
number of SCCs in the output automaton has been renamed to %c.
This makes it more homogeneous with the --stats option of the
new dstar2tgba command.
Additionally, the %p escape can now be used to show whether the
output automaton is complete, and the %r escape will give the
number of seconds spent building the output automaton (excluding
the time spent parsing the input).
- ltl2tgba, ltl2tgta, and dstar2tgba have a --complete option
to output complete automata.
- ltl2tgba, ltl2tgta, and dstar2tgba can use a SAT-solver to
minimize deterministic automata. Doing so is only needed on
properties that are stronger than obligations (for obligations
our WDBA-minimization procedure will return a minimimal
deterministic automaton more efficiently) and is disabled by
default. See the spot-x(7) man page for documentation about the
related options: sat-minimize, sat-states, sat-acc, state-based.
See also http://spot.lip6.fr/userdoc/satmin.html for some
examples.
- ltlfilt, genltl, and randltl now have a --latex option to output
formulas in a way that its easier to embed in a LaTeX document.
Each operator is output as a command such as \U, \F, etc.
doc/tl/spotltl.sty gives one possible definition for each macro.
- ltlfilt, genltl, and randltl have a new --format option to
indicate how to present the output formula, possibly with
information about the input.
- ltlfilt as a new option, --relabel-bool, to abstract independent
Boolean subformulae as if they were atomic propositions.
For instance "a & GF(c | d) & b & X(c | d)" would be rewritten
as "p0 & GF(p1) & Xp1".
* New functions and classes in the library:
- dtba_sat_synthetize(): Use a SAT-solver to build an equivalent
deterministic TBA with a fixed number of states.
- dtba_sat_minimize(), dtba_sat_minimize_dichotomy(): Iterate
dtba_sat_synthetize() to reduce the number of states of a TBA.
- dtgba_sat_synthetize(), dtgba_sat_minimize(),
dtgba_sat_minimize_dichotomy(): Likewise, for deterministic TGBA.
- is_complete(): Check whether a TGBA is complete.
- tgba_complete(): Complete an automaton by adding a sink state
if needed.
- dtgba_complement(): Complement a deterministic TGBA.
- satsolver(): Run an (external) SAT solver, honoring the
SPOT_SATSOLVER environment variable if set.
- tba_determinize(): Run a power-set construction, and attempt
to fix the acceptance simulation to build a deterministic TBA.
- dstar_parse(): Read a Streett or Rabin automaton in
ltl2dstar's format. Note that this format allows only
deterministic automata.
- nra_to_nba(): Convert a (possibly non-deterministic) Rabin
automaton to a non-deterministic Büchi automaton.
- dra_to_ba(): Convert a deterministic Rabin automaton to a Büchi
automaton, preserving acceptance in all SCCs where this is possible.
- nsa_to_tgba(): Convert a (possibly non-deterministic) Streett
automaton to a non-deterministic TGBA.
- dstar_to_tgba(): Convert any automaton returned by dstar_parse()
into a TGBA.
- build_tgba_mask_keep(): Build a masked TGBA that shows only
a subset of states of another TGBA.
- build_tgba_mask_ignore(): Build a masked TGBA that ignore
a subset of states of another TGBA.
- class tgba_proxy: Helps writing on-the-fly algorithms that
delegate most of their methods to the original automaton.
- class bitvect: A dynamic bit vector implementation.
- class word: An infinite word, stored as prefix + cycle, with a
simplify() methods to simplify cycle and prefix in obvious ways.
- class temporary_file: A temporary file. Can be instanciated with
create_tmp_file() or create_open_tmpfile().
- count_state(): Return the number of states of a TGBA. Implement
a couple of specializations for classes where is can be know
without exploration.
- to_latex_string(): Output a formula using LaTeX syntax.
- relabel_bse(): Relabeling of Boolean Sub-Expressions.
Implements ltlfilt's --relabel-bool option describe above.
* Noteworthy internal changes:
- When minimize_obligation() is not given the formula associated
to the input automaton, but that automaton is deterministic, it
can still attempt to call minimize_wdba() and check the correcteness
using dtgba_complement(). This allows dstar2tgba to apply
WDBA-minimization on deterministic Rabin automata.
- tgba_reachable_iterator_depth_first has been redesigned to
effectively perform a DFS. As a consequence, it does not
inherit from tgba_reachable_iterator anymore.
- postproc::set_pref() was used to accept an argument among Any,
Small or Deterministic. These can now be combined with Complete
as Any|Complete, Small|Complete, or Deterministic|Complete.
- operands of n-ary operators (like & and |) are now ordered so
that Boolean terms come first. This speeds up syntactic
implication checks slightly. Also, literals are now sorted
using strverscmp(), so that p5 comes before p12.
- Syntactic implication checks have been generalized slightly
(for instance 'a & b & F(a & b)' is now reduced to 'a & b'
while it was not changed in previous versions).
- All the parsers implemented in Spot now use the same type to
store locations.
- Cleanup of exported symbols
All symbols in the library now have hidden visibility on ELF systems.
Public classes and functions have been marked explicitely for export
with the SPOT_API macro.
During this massive update, some of functions that should not have
been made public in the first place have been moved away so that
they can only be used from the library. Some old of unused
functions have been removed.
removed:
- class loopless_modular_mixed_radix_gray_code
hidden:
- class acc_compl
- class acceptance_convertor
- class bdd_allocator
- class free_list
* Bug fixes:
- Degeneralization was not indempotant on automata with an
accepting initial state that was on a cycle, but without
self-loop.
- Configuring with --enable-optimization would reset the value of
CXXFLAGS.
New in spot 1.1.4 (2013-07-29)
* Bug fixes:
- The parser for neverclaim, updated in 1.1.3, would fail to
parse guards of the form (a) || (b) output by ltl2ba or
ltl3ba, and would only understand ((a) || (b)).
- When used from ltlcross, the same parser would fail to
parse further neverclaims after the first failure.
- Add a missing newline in some error message of ltlcross.
- Expressions like {SERE} were wrongly translated and simplified
for SEREs that accept the empty word: they were wrongly reduced
to true. Simplification and translation rules have been fixed,
and the doc/tl/tl.pdf specifications have been updated to better
explain that {SERE} has the semantics of a closure operator that
is not exactly what one could expect after reading the PSL
standard.
- Various typos.
New in spot 1.1.3 (2013-07-09)
* New feature:
- The neverclaim parser now understands the new style of output
used by Spin 6.24 and later.
* Bug fixes:
- The scc_filter() function could abort with a BDD error. If all
the acceptance sets of an SCC but the first one were useless.
- The script in bench/spin13/ would not work on MacOS X because
of some non-portable command.
- A memory corruption in ltlcross.
New in spot 1.1.2 (2013-06-09)
* Bug fixes:
- Uninitialized variables in ltlcross (affect the count of terminal
weak, and strong SCCs).
- Workaround an old GCC bug to allow compilation with g++ <= 4.5
- Fix several Doxygen comments so that they display correctly.
New in spot 1.1.1 (2013-05-13):
* New features:
- lbtt_reachable(), the function that outputs a TGBA in LBTT's
format, has a new option to indicate that the TGBA being printed
is in fact a Büchi automaton. In this case it outputs an LBTT
automaton with state-based acceptance.
The output of the guards has also been changed in two ways:
1. atomic propositions that do not match p[0-9]+ are always
double-quoted. This avoids issues where t or f were used as
atomic propositions in the formula, output as-is in the
automaton, and read back as true or false. Other names that
correspond to LBT operators would cause problem as well.
2. formulas that label transitions are now output as
irredundant-sums-of-products.
- 'ltl2tgba --ba --lbtt' will now output automata with state-based
acceptance. You can use 'ltl2tgba --ba --lbtt=t' to force the
output of transition-based acceptance like in the previous
versions.
Some illustrations of this point and the previous one can be
found in the man page for ltl2tgba(1).
- There is a new function scc_filter_states() that removes all
useless states from a TGBA. It is actually an abbridged version
of scc_filter() that does not alter the acceptance conditions of
the automaton. scc_filter_state() should be used when
post-processing TGBAs that actually represent BAs.
- simulation_sba(), cosimulation_sba(), and
iterated_simulations_sba() are new functions that apply to TGBAs
that actually represent BAs. They preserve the imporant
property that if a state of the BA is is accepting, the outgoing
transitions of that state are all accepting in the TGBA that
represent the BA. This is something that was not preserved by
functions cosimultion() and iterated_simulations() as mentionned
in the bug fixes below.
- ltlcross has a new option --seed, that makes it possible to
change the seed used by the random graph generator.
- ltlcross has a new option --products=N to check the result of
each translation against N different state spaces, and everage
the statistics of these N products. N default to 1; larger
values increase the chances to detect inconsistencies in the
translations, and also make the average size of the product
built against the translated automata a more pertinent
statistic.
- bdd_dict::unregister_all_typed_variables() is a new function,
making it easy to unregister all BDD variables of a given type
owned by some object.
* Bug fixes:
- genltl --gh-r generated the wrong formulas due to a typo.
- ltlfilt --eventual and --universal were not handled properly.
- ltlfilt --stutter-invariant would trigger an assert on PSL formulas.
- ltl2tgba, ltl2tgta, ltlcross, and ltlfilt, would all choke on empty
lines in a file of formulas. They now ignore empty lines.
- The iterated simulation applied on degeneralized TGBA was bogus
for two reasons: one was that cosimulation was applied using the
generic cosimulation for TGBA, and the second is that
SCC-filtering, performed between iterations, was also a
TGBA-based algorithm. Both of these algorithms could lose the
property that if a TGBA represents a BA, all the outgoing
transitions of a state should be accepting. As a consequence, some
formulas where translated to incorrect Büchi automata.
New in spot 1.1 (2013-04-28):
Several of the new features described below are discribed in
Tomáš Babiak, Thomas Badie, Alexandre Duret-Lutz, Mojmír
Křetínský, Jan Strejček: Compositional Approach to Suspension and
Other Improvements to LTL Translation. To appear in the
proceedings of SPIN'13.
* New features in the library:
- The postprocessor class now takes an optional option_map
argument that can be used to specify fine-tuning options, making
it easier to benchmark different scenarios while developing new
postprocessings.
- A new translator class implements a complete translation chain,
from LTL/PSL to TGBA/BA/Monitor. It performs pre- and
post-processings in addition to the core translation, and offers
an interface similar to that used in the postprocessor class, to
specify the intent of the translation.
- The degeneralization algorithm has learned three new tricks:
level reset, level caching, and SCC-based ordering. The former
two are enabled by default. Benchmarking has shown that the
latter one does not always have a positive effect, so it is
disabled by default. (See SPIN'13 paper.)
- The scc_filter() function, which removes dead SCCs and also
simplify acceptance conditions, has learnt how to simplify
acceptance conditions in a few tricky situations that were not
simplified previously. (See SPIN'13 paper.)
- A new translation, called compsusp(), for "Compositional
Suspension" is implemented on top of ltl_to_tgba_fm().
(See SPIN'13 paper.)
- Some experimental LTL rewriting rules that trie to gather
suspendable formulas are implemented and can be activated
with the favor_event_univ option of ltl_simplifier. As
always please check doc/tl/tl.tex for the list of rules.
- An experimental "don't care" (direct) simulation has been
implemented. This simulations consider the acceptance
of out-of-SCC transitions as "don't care". It is not
enabled by default because it currently is very slow.
- remove_x() is a function that take a formula, and rewrite it
without the X operator. The rewriting is only correct for
stutter-insensitive LTL formulas (See K. Etessami's paper in IFP
vol. 75(6). 2000) This algorithm is accessible from the
command-line using ltlfilt's --remove-x option.
- is_stutter_insensitive() takes any LTL formula, and check
whether it is stutter-insensitive. This algorithm is accessible
from the command-line using ltlfilt's --stutter-insensitive
option.
- Several functions have been introduced to check the
strength of an SCC.
is_inherently_weak_scc()
is_weak_scc()
is_syntactic_weak_scc()
is_complete_scc()
is_terminal_scc()
is_syntactic_terminal_scc()
Beware that the costly is_weak_scc() function introduced in Spot
1.0, which is based on a cycle enumeration, has been renammed to
is_inherently_weak_scc() to match established vocabulary.
* Command-line tools:
- ltl2tgba and ltl2tgta now honor a new --extra-options (or -x)
flag to fine-tune the algorithms used. The available options
are documented in the spot-x (7) manpage. For instance use '-x
comp-susp' to use the afore-mentioned compositional suspension.
- The output format of 'ltlcross --json' has been changed slightly.
In a future version we will offer some reporting script that turn
such JSON output into various tables and graphs, and these change
are required to make the format usable for other benchmarks (not
just ltlcross).
- ltlcross will now count the number of non-accepting, terminal,
weak, and strong SCCs, as well as the number of terminal, weak,
and strong automata produced by each tool.
* Documentation:
- org-mode files used to generate the documentation about
command-line tools (shown at http://spot.lip6.fr/userdoc/tools.html)
is distributed in doc/org/. The resulting html files are also
in doc/userdoc/.
* Web interface:
- A new "Compositional Suspension" tab has been added to experiment
with compositional suspension.
* Benchmarks:
- See bench/spin13/README for instructions to reproduce our Spin'13
benchmark for the compositional suspension.
* Bug fixes:
- There was a memory leak in the LTL simplification code, that could
only be triggered when disabling advanced simplifications.
- The translation of the PSL formula !{xxx} was incorrect when xxx
simplified to false.
- Various warnings triggered by new compilers.
New in spot 1.0.2 (2013-03-06):
* New features:
- the on-line ltl2tgba.html interface can output deterministic or
non-deterministic monitors. However, and unlike the ltl2tgba
command-line tool, it doesn't different output formats.
- the class ltl::ltl_simplifier now has an option to rewrite Boolean
subformulaes as irredundante-sum-of-product during the simplification
of any LTL/PSL formula. The service is also available as a method
ltl_simplifier::boolean_to_isop() that applies this rewriting
to a Boolean formula and implements a cache.
ltlfilt as a new option --boolean-to-isop to try to apply the
above rewriting from the command-line:
% ltlfilt --boolean-to-isop -f 'GF((a->b)&(b->c))'
GF((!a & !b) | (b & c))
This is currently not used anywhere else in the library.
* Bug fixes:
- 'ltl2tgba --high' is documented to be the same as 'ltl2tgba',
but by default ltl2tgba forgot to enable LTL simplifications based
on language containment, which --high do enable. There are now
enabled by default.
- the on-line ltl2tgba.html interface failed to output monitors,
testing automata, and generalized testing automata due to two
issues with the Python bindings. It also used to display
Testing Automaton Options when the desired output was set to Monitor.
- bench/ltl2tgba would not work in a VPATH build.
- a typo caused some .dir-locals.el configuration parameters to be
silently ignored by emacs
- improved Doxygen comments for formula_to_bdd, bdd_to_formula,
and bdd_dict.
- src/tgbatest/ltl2tgba (not to be confused with src/bin/ltl2tgba)
would have a memory leak when passed the conflicting option -M
and -O. It probably has many other problems. Do not use
src/tgbatest/ltl2tgba if you are not writing a test case for
Spot. Use src/bin/ltl2tgba instead.
New in spot 1.0.1 (2013-01-23):
* Bug fixes:
- Two executions of the simulation reductions could produce
two isomorphic automata, but with transitions in a different
order.
- ltlcross did not diagnose write errors to temporary files,
and certain versions of g++ would warn about it.
- "P0.init" is parsed as an atomic even without the double quotes,
but it was always output with double quotes. This version will
not quote this atomic proposition anymore.
- "U", "W", "M", "R" were correctly parsed as atomic propositions
(instead of binary operators) when placed in double quotes, but
on output they were output without quotes, making the result
unparsable.
- the to_lbt_string() functions would always output a trailing space.
This is not the case anymore.
- tgba_product::transition_annotation() would segfault when
called in a product against a Kripke structure.
* Minor improvements:
- Four new LTL simplifications rules:
GF(a|Xb) = GF(a|b)
GF(a|Fb) = GF(a|b)
FG(a&Xb) = FG(a&b)
FG(a&Gb) = FG(a&b)
- The on-line version of ltl2tgba now displays edge and
transition counts, just as the ltlcross tool.
- ltlcross will display the number of timeouts at the end
of its execution.
- ltlcross will diagnose tools with missing input or
output %-sequence before attempting to run any of them.
- The parser for LBT's prefix-style LTL formulas will now
read atomic propositions that are not of the form p1, p2...
This makes it possible to process formulas written in
ltl2dstar's syntax.
* Pruning:
- lbtt has been removed from the distribution. A copy of the last
version we distributed is still available at
http://spot.lip6.fr/dl/lbtt-1.2.1a.tar.gz
and our test suite will use it if it is installed, but the same
tests are already performed by ltlcross.
- the bench/ltl2tgba/ benchmark, that used lbtt to compare various
LTL-to-Büchi translators, has been updated to use ltlcross. It
now output summary tables in LaTeX. Support for Modella (no
longer available online), and Wring (requires a too old Perl
version) have been dropped.
- the half-baked and underdocumented "Event TGBA" support in
src/evtgba*/ has been removed, as it was last worked on in 2004.
New in spot 1.0 (2012-10-27):
* License change: Spot is now distributed using GPL v3+ instead
of GPL v2+. This is because we started using some third-party
files distributed under GPL v3+.
* Command-line tools
Useful command-line tools are now installed in addition to the
library. Some of these tools were originally written for our test
suite and had evolved organically into useful programs with crappy
interfaces: they have now been rewritten with better argument
parsing, saner defaults, and they come with man pages.
- genltl: Generate LTL formulas from scalable patterns.
This offers 20 patterns so far.
- randltl: Generate random LTL/PSL formulas.
- ltlfilt: Filter lists of formulas according to several criteria
(e.g., match only safety formulas that are larger than
some given size). Besides being used as a "grep" tool
for formulas, this can also be used to convert
files of formulas between different syntaxes, apply
some simplifications, check whether to formulas are
equivalent, ...
- ltl2tgba: Translate LTL/PSL formulas into Büchi automata (TGBA,
BA, or Monitor). A fundamental change to the
interface is that you may now specify the goal of the
translation: do you you favor deterministic or smaller
automata?
- ltl2tgta: Translate LTL/PSL formulas into Testing Automata.
- ltlcross: Compare the output of translators from LTL/PSL to
Büchi automata, to find bug or for benchmarking. This
is essentially a Spot-based reimplementation of LBTT
that supports PSL in addition to LTL, and that can
output more statistics.
An introduction to these tools can be found on-line at
http://spot.lip6.fr/userdoc/tools.html
The former test versions of genltl and randltl have been removed
from the source tree. The old version of ltl2tgba with its
gazillion options is still in src/tgbatest/ and is meant to be
used for testing only. Although ltlcross is meant to replace
LBTT, we are still using both tools in this release; however this
is likely to be the last release of Spot that redistributes LBTT.
* New features in the Spot library:
- Support for various flavors of Testing Automata.
The flavors are:
+ "classical" Testing Automata, as used for instance by
Geldenhuys and Hansen (Spin'06), using Büchi and
livelock acceptance conditions.
+ Generalized Testing Automata, extending the previous
with multiple Büchi acceptance sets.
+ Transition-based Generalized Testing Automata moving Büchi
acceptance to transitions, and getting rid of livelock
acceptance conditions by expliciting stuttering self-loops.
Supporting algorithms include anything required to run
the automata-theoretic approach using testing automata:
+ dedicated synchronized product
+ dedicated emptiness-check for TA and GTA, as these
may require two passes because of the two kinds of
acceptance, while a TGTA can be checked for emptiness
with the same one-pass algorithm as a TGBA.
+ conversion from a TGBA to any of the above kind, with
options to reduce these automata with bisimulation,
and to produce a BA/GBA that require a single pass
(at the expense of determinism).
+ output in dot format for display
A discussion of these automata, part of Ala Eddine BEN SALEM's
PhD work, should appear in ToPNoC VI (LNCS 7400). The web-based
interface and the aforementioned ltl2tgta tool can be used
to build testing automata.
- TGBA can now be reduced by Reverse Simulation (in addition to
the Direct Simulation introduced in 0.9). A function called
iterated_simulations() will alternate direct and reverse
simulations in a loop as long as it diminishes the size of the
automaton.
- The enumerate_cycles class implements the Loizou-Thanisch
algorithm to enumerate elementary cycles in a SCC. As an
example of use, is_weak_scc() will tell whether an SCC is
inherently weak (all its cycles are accepting, or none of them
are).
- parse_lbt() will parse an LTL formula expressed in the prefix
syntax used (at least) by LBT, LBTT and Scheck.
to_lbt_string() can be used to print an LTL formula using this
syntax.
- to_wring_string() can be used to print an LTL formula into
Wring's syntax.
- The LTL/PSL parser now has a lenient mode that can be useful
to interpret atomic proposition with language-specific constructs.
In lenient mode, any (...) or {...} block that cannot be parsed
as formula will be assumed to be an atomic proposition.
For instance the input (a < b) U (process[2]@ok), normally
flagged as a syntax error, is read as "a < b" U "process[2]@ok"
in lenient mode.
- minimize_obligation() has a new option to disable WDBA
minimization it cases it would produce a deterministic automaton
that is bigger than the original TGBA. This can help
choosing between less states or more determinism.
- new functions is_deterministic() and count_nondet_states()
(The count of nondeterministic states is now displayed on
automata generated with the web interface.)
- A new class, "postprocessor", makes it easier to apply
all available simplification algorithms on a TGBA/BA/Monitors.
* Minor changes:
- The '*' operator can (again) be used as an AND in LTL formulas.
This is for compatibility with formula written in Wring's
syntax. However inside SERE it is interpreted as the Kleen
star.
- When printing a formula using Spin's LTL syntax, we don't
double-quote complex atomic propositions (that was not valid
Spin input anyway). For instance F"foo == 2" used to be
output as <>"foo == 2". We now output <>(foo == 2) instead.
The latter syntax is understood by Spin 6. It can be read
back by Spot in lenient mode (see above).
- The gspn-ssp benchmark has been removed.
New in spot 0.9.2 (2012-07-02):
* New features to the web interface.
- It can run ltl3ba (Babiak et al., TACAS'12) where available.
- "a loading logo" is displayed when result is not instantaneous.
* Speed improvements:
- The unicity hash table of BuDDy has been separated separated
node table for better cache-friendliness. The resulting speedup
is around 5% on BDD-intensive algorithms.
- A new BDD operation, called bdd_implies() has been added to
BuDDy to check whether one BDD implies another. This benefits
mostly the simulation and degeneralization algorithms of Spot.
- A new offline implementation of the degeneralization (which
had always been performed on-the-fly so far) available. This
especially helps the Safra complementation.
* Bug fixes:
- The CGI script running for ltl2tgba.html will correctly timeout
after 30s when Spot's translation takes more time.
- Applying WDBA-minimization on an automaton generated by the
Couvreur/LaCIM translator could lead to an incorrect automaton
due to a bug in the definition of product with symbolic
automata.
- The Makefile.am of BuDDy, LBTT, and Spot have been adjusted to
accomodate Automake 1.12 (while still working with 1.11).
- Better error recovery when parsing broken LTL formulae.
- Fix errors and warnings reported by clang 3.1 and the
upcoming g++ 4.8.
New in spot 0.9.1 (2012-05-23):
* The version of LBTT we distribute includes a patch from Tomáš
Babiak to count the number of non-deterministic states, and the
number of deterministic automata produced.
See lbtt/NEWS for the list of other differences with the original
version of LBTT 1.2.1.
* The Couvreur/FM translator has learned two new tricks. These only
help to speedup the translation by not issuing states or
acceptance conditions that would be latter suppresed by other
optimizations.
- The translation rules used to translate subformulae of the G
operator have been adjusted not to produce useless loops
already implied by G. This generalizes the "GF" trick
presented in Couvreur's original FM'99 paper.
- Promises generated for formula of the form P(a U (b U c))
are reduced into P(c), avoiding the introduction of many
promises that imply each other.
* The tgba_parse() function is now available via the Python
bindings.
* Bug fixes:
- The random SERE generator was using the wrong operators
for "and" and "or", mistaking And/Or with AndRat/OrRat.
- The translation of !{r} was incorrect when this subformula
was recurring (e.g. in G!{r}) and r had loops.
- Correctly recognize ltl2tgba's option -rL.
- Using LTL simplification rules based on syntactic implication,
or based on language containment checks, caused BDD variables
to be allocated in an "unnatural" order, resulting in a slower
translation and a less optimal degeneralization.
- When ltl2tgba reads a neverclaim, it now considers the resulting
TGBA as a Büchi automaton, and will display double circles in
the dotty output.
New in spot 0.9 (2012-05-09):
* New features:
- Operators from the linear fragment of PSL are supported. This
basically extends LTL with Sequential Extended Regulat
Expressions (SERE), and a couple of operators to bridge SERE and
LTL. See doc/tl/tl.pdf for the list of operators and their
semantics.
- Formula rewritings have been completely revamped, and augmented
with rules for PSL operators (and some new LTL rules as well).
See doc/tl/tl.pdf for the list of the rewritings implemented.
- Some of these rewritings that may produce larger formulas
(for instance to rewrite "{a;b;c}" into "a & X(b & Xc)")
may be explicitely disabled with a new option.
- The src/ltltest/randltl tool can now generate random SEREs
and random PSL formulae.
- Only one translator (ltl2tgba_fm) has been augmented to
translate the new SERE and PSL operators. The internal
translation from SERE to DFA is likely to be rewriten in a
future version.
- A new function, length_boolone(), computes the size of an
LTL/PSL formula while considering that any Boolean term has
length 1.
- The LTL/PSL parser recognizes some UTF-8 characters (like ◇ or
∧) as operators, and some output routines now have an UTF-8
output mode. Tools like randltl and ltl2tgba have gained an -8
option to enable such output. See doc/tl/tl.pdf for the list
of recognized codepoints.
- A new direct simulation reduction has been implemented. It
works directly on TGBAs. It is in src/tgbaalgos/simlation.hh,
and it can be tested via ltl2tgba's -RDS option.
- unabbreviate_wm() is a function that rewrites the W and M operators
of LTL formulae using R and U. This is called whenever we output
a formula in Spin syntax. By combining this with the aforementioned
PSL rewriting rules, many PSL formulae that use simple SERE can be
converted into LTL formulae that can be feed to tools that only
understand U and R. The web interface will let you do this.
- changes to the on-line translator:
+ SVG output is available
+ can display some properties of a formula
+ new options for direct simulation, larger rewritings, and
utf-8 output
- configure --without-included-lbtt will prevent LBTT from being
configured and built. This helps on systems (such as MinGW)
where LBTT cannot be built. The test-suite will skip any
LBTT-based test if LBTT is missing.
* Interface changes:
- Operators ->, <->, U, W, R, and M are now parsed as
right-associative to better match the PSL standard.
- The constructors for temporal formulae will perform some trivial
simplifications based on associativity, commutativity,
idempotence, and neutral elements. See doc/tl/tl.pdf for the
list of such simplifications.
- Formula instances now have many methods to inspect their
properties (membership to syntactic classes, absence of X
operator, etc...) in constant time.
- LTL/PSL formulae are now handled everywhere as 'const formula*'
and not just 'formula*'. This reflects the true nature of these
(immutable) formula objects, and cleanups a lot of code.
Unfortunately, it is a backward incompatible change: you may have
to add 'const' to a couple of lines in your code, and change
'ltl::const_vistitor' into 'ltl::visitor' if you have written a
custom visitor.
- The new entry point for LTL/PSL simplifications is the function
ltl_simplifier::simplify() declared in src/ltlvisit/simplify.hh.
The ltl_simplifier class implements a cache.
Functions such as reduce() or reduce_tau03() are deprecated.
- The old game-theory-based implementations for direct and delayed
simulation reductions have been removed. The old direct
simulation would only work on degeneralized automata, and yet
produce results inferior to the new direct simulation introduced
in this release. The implementation of delayed simulation was
unreliable. The function reduc_tgba_sim() has been kept
for compatibility (it calls the new direct simulation whatever
the type of simulation requested) and marked as deprecated.
ltl2tgba's options -Rd, -RD are gone. Options -R1t, -R1s,
-R2s, and -R2t are deprecated and all made equivalent to -RDS.
- The tgba_explicit hierarchy has been reorganized in order to
make room for sba_explicit classes that share most of the code.
The main consequence is that the tgba_explicit type no longuer
exists. However the tgba_explicit_number,
tgba_explicit_formula, and tgba_explicit_string still do.
New in spot 0.8.3 (2012-03-09):
* Support for both Python 2.x and Python 3.x.
(Previous versions would only work with Python 2.x.)
* The online ltl2tgba.html now stores its state in the URL so that
history is preserved, and links to particular setups can be sent.
* Bug fixes:
- Fix a segfault in the compression code used by the -Z
option of dve2check.
- Fix a race condition in the CGI script.
- Fix a segfault in the CGI script when computing a Büchi run.
New in spot 0.8.2 (2012-01-19):
* configure now has a --disable-python option to disable
the compilation of Python bindings.
* Minor speedups in the Safra complementation.
* Better memory management for the on-the-fly degeneralization
algorithm. This mostly benefits to the Safra complementation.
* Bug fixes:
- spot::ltl::length() forgot to count the '&' and '|' operators
in an LTL formula.
- minimize_wdba() could fail to mark some transiant SCCs as accepting,
producing an automaton that was not fully minimized.
- minimize_dfa() could produce incorrect automata, but it is not
clear whether this could have had an inpact on WDBA minimization
(the worse case is that some TGBA would not have been minimized
when they could).
- Fix a Python syntax error in the CGI script.
- Fix compilation with g++ 4.0.
- Fix a make check failure when valgrind is missing.
New in spot 0.8.1 (2011-12-18):
* Only bug fixes:
- When ltl2tgba is set to perform both WDBA minimization and
degeneralization, do the latter only if the former failed.
In previous version, automata were (uselessly) degeneralized
before WDBA minimization, causing important slowdowns.
- Fix compilation with Clang 3.0.
- Fix a Makefile setup causing a "make check" failure on MacOS X.
- Fix an mkdir error in the CGI script.
New in spot 0.8 (2011-11-28):
* Major new features:
- Spot can read DiVinE models. See iface/dve2/README for details.
- The genltl tool can now output 20 different LTL formula families.
It also replaces the LTLcounter Perl scripts.
- There is a printer and parser for Kripke structures in text format.
* Major interface changes:
- The destructor of all states is now private. Any code that looks like
"delete some_state;" will cause an compile error and should be
updated to "some_state->destroy();". This new syntax is supported
since version 0.7.
- The experimental Nips interface has been removed.
* Minor changes:
- The dotty_reachable() function has a new option "assume_sba" that
can be used for rendering automata with state-based acceptance.
In that case, acceptance states are displayed with a double
circle. ltl2tgba (both command line and on-line) Use it to display
degeneralized automata.
- The dotty_reachable() function will also display transition
annotations (as returned by the tgba::transitition_annotation()).
This can be useful when displaying (small) state spaces.
- Identifiers used to name atomic proposition can contain dots.
E.g.: X.Y is now an atomic proposition, while it was understood
as X&Y in previous versions.
- The Doxygen documentation is no longer built as a PDF file.
* Internal improvements:
- The on-line ltl2tgba CGI script uses a cache to produce faster
answers.
- Better memory management for the states of explicit automata.
Thanks to the aforementioned ->destroy() change, we can avoid
cloning explicit states.
- tgba_product has learned how to be faster when one of the operands
is a Kripke structure (15% speedup).
- The reduction rule for "a M b" has been improved: it can be
reduced to "a & b" if "a" is a pure eventuallity.
- More useless acceptance conditions are removed by SCC simplifications.
* Bug fixes:
- Safra complementation has been fixed in cases where more than
one acceptance conditions where needed to convert the
deterministic Streett automaton as a TGBA.
- The degeneralization is now idempotent. Previously, degeneralizing
an already degeneralized automaton could add some states.
- The degeneralization now has a deterministic behavior. Previously
it was possible to obtain different output depending on the
memory layout.
- Spot now outputs neverclaims with fully parenthesized guards.
I.e., instead of
(!x && y) -> goto S1
it now outputs
((!(x)) && (y)) -> goto S1
This prevents problems when the model defines `x' as
#define x flag==0
because !x then evaluated to (!flag)==0 instead of !(flag==0).
New in spot 0.7.1 (2011-02-07):
* The LTL parser will accept operator ~ (for not) as well
as --> and <--> (for implication and equivalence), allowing
formulae from the Büchi Store to be read directly.
* The neverclaim parser will accept guards of the form
:: !(...) -> goto ...
instead of the more commonly used
:: (!(...)) -> goto ...
This makes it possible to read neverclaims provided by the Büchi Store.
* A new ltl2tgba option, -kt, will count the number of "sub-transitions".
I.e., a transition labelled by "true" counts for 4 "sub-transitions"
if the automaton uses 2 atomic propositions.
* Bugs fixed:
- Fix segfault during WDBA minimization on automata with useless states.
- Use the included BuDDy library if the one already installed
is older than the one distributed with Spot 0.7.
- Fix two typos in the code of the CGI scripts.
New in spot 0.7 (2011-02-01):
* Spot is now able to read an automaton expressed as a Spin neverclaim.
* The "experimental" Kripke structure introduced in Spot 0.5 has
been rewritten, and is no longer experimental. We have a
developement version of checkpn using it, and it should be
released shortly after Spot 0.7.
* The function to_spin_string(), that outputs an LTL formula using
Spin's syntax, now takes an optional argument to request
parentheses at all levels.
* src/ltltest/genltl is a new tool that generates some interesting
families of LTL formulae, for testing purpose.
* bench/ltlclasses/ uses the above tool to conduct the same benchmark
as in the DepCoS'09 paper by Cichoń et al. The resulting benchmark
completes in 12min, while it tooks days (or exhausted the memory)
when the paper was written (they used Spot 0.4).
* Degeneralization has again been improved in two ways:
- It will merge degeneralized transitions that can be merged.
- It uses a cache to speed up the improvement introduced in 0.6.
* An implementation of Dax et al.'s paper for minimizing obligation
formulae has been integrated. Use ltl2tgba -Rm to enable this
optimization from the command-line; it will have no effect if the
property is not an obligation.
* bench/wdba/ conducts a benchmark similar to the one on Dax's
webpage, comparing the size of the automata expressing obligation
formula before and after minimization. See bench/wdba/README for
results.
* Using similar code, Spot can now construct deterministic monitors.
* New ltl2tgba options:
-XN: read an input automaton as a neverclaim.
-C, -CR: Compute (and display) a counterexample after running the
emptiness check. With -CR, the counterexample will be
replayed on the automaton to ensure it is correct
(previous version would always compute a replay a
counterexample when emptiness-check was enabled)
-ks: traverse the automaton to compute its number of states and
transitions (this is faster than -k which will also count
SCCs and paths).
-M: Build a deterministic monitor.
-O: Tell whether a formula represents a safety, guarantee, or
obligation property.
-Rm: Minimize automata representing obligation properties.
* The on-line tool to translate LTL formulae into automata
has been rewritten and is now at http://spot.lip6.fr/ltl2tgba.html
It requires a javascript-enabled browser.
* Bug fixes:
- Location of the errors messages in the TGBA parser where inaccurate.
- Various warning fixes for different versions of GCC and Clang.
- The neverclaim output with ltl2tgba -N or -NN used to ignore any
automaton simplification performed after degeneralization.
- The formula simplification based on universality and eventuality
had a quadratic run-time.
New in spot 0.6 (2010-04-16):
* Several optimizations to improve some auxiliary steps
of the LTL translation (not the core of the translation):
- Better degeneralization
- SCC simplifications has been tuned for degeneralization
(ltl2tgba now has two options -R3 and -R3f: the latter will
remove every acceptance condition that used to be removed
in Spot 0.5 while the former will leave useless acceptance conditions
going to accepting SCC. Experience shows that -R3 is more
favorable to degeneralization).
- ltl2tgba will perform SCC optimizations before degeneralization
and not the converse
- We added a syntactic simplification rule to rewrite F(a)|F(b) as F(a|b).
We only had a rule for the more specific FG(a)|FG(b) = F(Ga|Gb).
- The syntactic simplification rule for F(a&GF(b)) = F(a)&GF(b) has
be disabled because the latter formula is in fact harder to translate
efficiently.
* New LTL operators: W (weak until) and its dual M (strong release)
- Weak until allows many LTL specification to be specified more
compactly.
- All LTL translation algorithms have been updated to
support these operators.
- Although they do not add any expressive power, translating
"a W b" is more efficient (read smaller output automaton) than
translating the equivalent form using the U operator.
- Basic syntactic rewriting rules will automatically rewrite "a U
(b | G(a))" and "(a U b)|G(a)" as "a W b", so you will benefit
from the new operators even if you do not use them. Similar
rewriting rules exist for R and M, although they are less used.
* New options have been added to the CGI script for
- SVG output
- SCC simplifications
* Bug fixes:
- The precedence of the "->" and "<->" Boolean operators has been
adjusted to better match other tools.
Spot <= 0.5 used to parse "a & b -> c & d" as "a & (b -> c) & d";
Spot >= 0.6 will parse it as "(a & b) -> (c & d)".
- The random graph generator was fixed (again!) not to produce
dead states as documented.
- Locations in the error messages of the LTL parser were off by one.
New in spot 0.5 (2010-02-01):
* We have setup two mailing lists:
- <spot-announce@lrde.epita.fr> is read-only and will be used to
announce new releases. You may subscribe at
https://www.lrde.epita.fr/mailman/listinfo/spot-announce
- <spot@lrde.epita.fr> can be used to discuss anything related
to Spot. You may subscribe at
https://www.lrde.epita.fr/mailman/listinfo/spot-announce
* Two new LTL translations have been implemented:
- eltl_to_tgba_lacim() is a symbolic translation for ELTL based on
Couvreur's LaCIM'00 paper. For this translation (available with
ltl2tgba's option -le), all operators are described as finite
automata. A default set of operators is provided for LTL
(option -lo) and user may add more automaton operators.
- ltl_to_taa() is a translation based on Tauriainen's PhD thesis.
LTL is translated to "self-loop" alternating automata
and then to Transition-based Generalized Automata. (ltl2tgba's
option -taa).
The "Couvreur/FM" translation remains the best LTL translation
available in Spot.
* The data structures used to represent LTL formulae have been
overhauled, and it resulted in a big performence improvement
(in time and memory consumption) for the LTL translation.
* Two complementation algorithms for state-based Büchi automata
have been implemented:
- tgba_kv_complement is an on-the-fly implementation of the
Kupferman-Vardi construction (TCS'05) for generalized acceptance
conditions.
- tgba_safra_complement is an implementation of Safra's
complementation. This algorithm takes a degeneralized Büchi
automaton as input, but our implementation for the Streett->Büchi
step will produce a generalized automaton in the end.
* ltl2tgba has gained several options and the help text has been
reorganized. Please run src/tgbatest/ltl2tgba without arguments
for details. Couvreur/FM is now the default translation.
* The ltl2tgba.py CGI script can now run standalone. It also offers
the Tauriainen/TAA translation, and some options for SCC-based
reductions.
* Automata using BDD-encoded transitions relation can now be pruned
for useless states symbolically using the delete_unaccepting_scc()
function. This is ltl2tgba's -R3b option.
* The SCC-based simplification (ltl2tgba's -R3 option) has been
rewritten and improved.
* The "*" symbol, previously parsed as a synonym for "&" is no
longer recognized. This makes room for an upcoming support of
rational operators.
* More benchmarks in the bench/ directory:
- gspn-ssp/ some benchmarks published at ACSD'07,
- ltlcounter/ translation of a class of LTL formulae used by
Rozier & Vardi at SPIN'07
- scc-stats/ SCC statistics after translation of LTL formulae
- split-product/ parallelizing gain after splitting LTL automata
* An experimental Kripke interface has been developed to simplify
the integration of third party tools that do not use acceptance
conditions and that have label on states instead of transitions.
This interface has not been used yet.
* Experimental interface with the Nips virtual machine.
It is not very useful as Spot isn't able to retrieve any property
information from the model. This will just check assertions.
* Distribution:
- The Boost C++ library is now required.
- Update to Autoconf 2.65, Automake 1.11.1, Libtool 2.2.6b,
Bison 2.4.1, and Swig 1.3.40.
- Thanks to the newest Automake, "make check" will now
run in parallel if you use "make -j2 check" or more.
* Bug fixes:
- Disable warnings from the garbage collection of BuDDy, it
could break the standard output of ltl2tgba.
- Fix several C++ constructs to ensure Spot will build with
GCC 4.3, 4.4, and older 3.x releases, as well as with Intel's
ICC compiler.
- A very old bug in the hash function for LTL formulae caused Spot
to sometimes (but very rarely) consider two different LTL formulae
as equal.
New in spot 0.4 (2007-07-17):
* Upgrade to Autoconf 2.61, Automake 1.10, Bison 2.3, and Swig 1.3.31.
* Better LTL simplifications.
* Don't initialize Buddy if it has already been initialized (in case
the client software is already using Buddy).
* Lots of work in the greatspn interface for our ACSD'05 paper.
* Bug fixes:
- Fix the random graph generator not to produce dead states as documented.
- Fix synchronized product in case both side use acceptance conditions.
- Fix some syntax errors with newer versions of GCC.
New in spot 0.3 (2006-01-25):
* lbtt 1.2.0
* The CGI script for LTL translation also offers emptiness check algorithms.
* tau03_opt_search implements the "ordering heuristic".
(Submitted by Heikki Tauriainen.)
* A couple of bugs were fixed into the LTL or automata simplifications.
New in spot 0.2 (2005-04-08):
* Emptiness checks:
- the new spot::option_map class is used to pass options to
emptiness-check algorithms.
- the new emptiness_check_instantiator class is used to turn a
string such as `algorithm(option1, option2)' into an actual
instance of this emptiness-check algorithm with the given
options. All tools use this.
- tau03_opt_search implements the "condition heuristic".
(Suggested by Heikki Tauriainen.)
* Minor bug fixes.
New in spot 0.1 (2005-01-31):
* Emptiness checks:
- They all follow the same interface, and gather statistical data.
- New algorithms: gv04.hh, se05.hh, tau03.hh, tau03opt.hh
- New options for couvreur99: poprem and group.
- reduce_run() try to reduce accepting runs produced by emptiness checks.
- replay_run() ensure accepting runs are actually accepting runs.
* New testing tools:
- ltltest/randltl: Generate random LTL formulae.
- tgbatest/randtgba: Generate random TGBAs. Optionally multiply them
against random LTL formulae. Optionally check them for emptiness
with all available algorithms. Optionally gather statistics.
* bench/emptchk/: Contains scripts that benchmark emptiness-checks.
* Split the degeneralization proxy in two:
- tgba_tba_proxy uses at most max(N,1) copies
- tgba_sba_proxy uses at most 1+max(N,1) copies and has a
state_is_accepting() method
* tgba::transition_annotation annotate a transition with some string.
This comes handy to associate that transition to its high-level name.
* Preliminary support for Event-based GBA (the evtgba*/ directories).
This might as well disappear in a future release.
* LTL formulae are now sorting using their string representation, instead
of their memory address (which is still unique). This makes the output
of the various functions more deterministic.
* The Doxygen documentation is now organized using modules.
New in spot 0.0x (2004-08-13):
* New atomic_prop_collect() function: collect atomic propositions
in an LTL formula.
* Fix several typos in documentation, and some warnings in the code.
* Now compiles on Darwin and Cygwin.
* Upgrade to Automake 1.9.1, and lbtt 1.1.2.
(And drop support for older lbtt versions.)
* Support newer versions of Valgrind (>= 2.1.0).
New in spot 0.0v (2004-06-29):
* LTL formula simplifications using basic rewriting rules,
a-la Wring syntactic approximations, and Etessami's universal
and existential classes.
- Function reduce() in ltlvisit/reduce.hh is the main interface.
- Can be tested with the CGI script.
* TGBA simplifications using direct simulation, delayed simulation,
and SCC-based simplifications. This is still experimental.
* The LTL parser will now read LTL formulae written using Wring's syntax.
* ltl2tgba_fm() now has options for on-the-fly fair-loop approximations,
and Modella-like branching-postponement.
* GreatSPN interface:
- The `declarative_environment' is now part of Spot itself rather than
part of the interface with GreatSPN.
- the RG and SRG interface can deal with dead markings in three
ways (omit deadlocks from the state graph, stutter on the deadlock
and consider as a regular behavior, or stutter and distinguish the
deadlock with a property).
- update SSP interface to Soheib Baarir latest work.
* Preliminary Python bindings for BuDDy's FDD and BVEC.
* Upgrade to BuDDy 2.3.
New in spot 0.0t (2004-04-23):
* `emptiness_check':
- fix two bugs in the computation of the counter example,
- revamp the interface for better customization.
* `never_claim_reachable': new function.
* Introduce annonymous BDD variables in `bdd_dict', and start
to use it in `ltl_to_tgba_fm'.
* Offer never claim in the CGI script.
* Rename EESRG as SSP, and offer specialized variants of the
emptiness_check.
New in spot 0.0r (2004-03-08):
* In ltl_to_tgba_fm:
- New option `exprop' to optimize determinism.
- Make the `symbolic indentification' from 0.0p optional.
* `nonacceptant_lbtt_reachable' new function to help getting
accurate statistics from LBTT.
* Revamp the cgi script's user interface.
* Upgrade to lbtt 1.0.3, swig 1.3.21, automake 1.8.3
New in spot 0.0p (2004-02-03):
* In ltl_to_tgba_fm:
- identify states with identical symbolic expansions
(i.e., identical continuations)
- use Acc[b] as acceptance condition for Fb, not Acc[Fb].
* Update and speed-up the cgi script.
* Improve degeneralization.
New in spot 0.0n (2004-01-13):
* emptiness_check::check2() is a variant of Couvreur's emptiness check that
explores visited states first.
* Build the EESRG supporting code condinally, as the associated
GreatSPN changes have not yet been contributed to GreatSPN.
* Add a powerset algorithm (determinize TGBA ignoring acceptance
conditions, i.e., as if they were used to recognize finite languages).
* tgba_explicit::merge_transitions: merge transitions with same source,
destination, and acceptance condition.
* Run test cases within valgrind.
* Various bug fixes.
New in spot 0.0l (2003-12-01):
* Computation of prime implicants. This simplify the output of
ltl_to_tgba_fm, and allows conditions to be output as some of
product in dot output.
* Optimize translation of GFy in ltl_to_tgba_fm.
* tgba_explicit supports arbitrary binary formulae on transitions
(only conjunctions were allowed).
New in spot 0.0j (2003-11-03):
* Use hash_map's instead of map's almost everywhere.
* New emptiness check, based on Couvreur's algorithm.
* LTL propositions can be put inside doublequotes to disambiguate
some constructions.
* Preliminary support for GreatSPN's EESRG.
* Various bug fixes.
New in spot 0.0h (2003-08-18):
* More python bindings:
- "import buddy" works (see wrap/python/tests/bddnqueen.py for an example),
- almost all the Spot API is now available via "import spot".
* wrap/python/cgi/ltl2tgba.py is an LTL-to-Büchi translator that
work as as a cgi script.
* Couvreur's FM'99 ltl-to-tgba translation.
New in spot 0.0f (2003-08-01):
* More python bindings, still only for the spot::ltl:: namespace.
* Functional GSPN interface. (Enable with --with-gspn=directory.)
* The LTL scanner recognizes /\, \/, and xor.
* Upgrade to lbtt 1.0.2.
* tgba_tba_proxy is an on-the-fly degeneralizer.
* Implements the "magic search" algorithm.
(Works only on a tgba_tba_proxy.)
* Tgba's output algorithms (save(), dotty()) now non-recursive.
* During products, succ_iter will optimize its set of successors
using information computed from the current product state.
* BDD dictionnaries are now shared between automata and. This
gets rid of all the BDD-variable translating machinery.
New in spot 0.0d (2003-07-13):
* Optimize translation of G operators occurring at the root
of a formula (or its immediate children when the root is a
conjunction). This saves two BDD variables per G operator.
* Distribute lbtt, and run it during `make check'.
* First sketch of GSPN interface.
* succ_iter_concreate::next() completely rewritten.
* Transitions are now labelled by boolean formulae (not only
conjunctions).
* Documentation:
- Output collaboration diagrams.
- Build and distribute PDF manual.
* Many bug fixes.
New in spot 0.0b (2003-06-26):
* Everything.