Current Developments

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Revision as of 16:04, 26 March 2010 by imported>Son (→‎Generic Instantiation)
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This page sum up the known developments that are being done around or for the Rodin Platform. Please contributes informations about your own development to keep the community informed

You may also have a look at past developments.

Deploy Tasks

The following tasks were planned at some stage of the Deploy project.

Code Generation

Code Generation wiki page

Core Platform

Better event-B Editor

Feedback from users indicates strongly that the current layout used in the default event-B editor (edit tab) is sub-optimal and severely hinders usability of the Rodin platform. Ideas for improving this are collected on page: Layout improvements in the event-B editor.

Mathematical Language

Predicate variables extension

Proposals for mathematical extensions

Text Editor

The efforts in Düsseldorf (Fabian) and Newcastle (Alexei) have been joined to create a single text editor which will be part of the EMF framework for Event-B (see that section for details).

The first version of the TextEditor will be released in a few weeks (following the Rodin 1.0 release). Until then we are going to release a few testing releases (beta) for interested users. Find detailed information on the page TextEditor.

EMF framework for Event-B

Newcastle, Southampton and Düsseldorf have begun to develop an EMF framework to support Rodin modelling tools based on EMF. The framework includes an EMF representation of Event-B, a synchronising persistence interface for loading and saving models via the Rodin API and facilities to support text editing and parsing. Examples of tools that will be based on the EMF framework for Rodin are, a Text editor, a compare/merge editor (which can be used for team based development), pattern/composition tools, Diagram Editors.

More details can be found here: EMF framework for Event-B

Preferences for the automatic tactics

Systerel is in charge of this task.

For more details on Preferences for the automatic tactics, see Preferences for the automatic tactics.

The purpose is to give more detailed preferences to the user to build his own automated tactics.

New Tactic Providers

Systerel is in charge of this task.

For more details on New Tactic Providers, see New Tactic Providers.

The purpose is to give more flexibility to tactic providers by allowing them to provide as many tactic applications as they will for a given proof node, even they apply to the same predicate and at the same position.

Generated Model Elements

Systerel is in charge of this task. It aims to tag elements of a model that have been generated by a tool, in order to prevent from directly editing these elements.

For more details on Generated Model Elements, see Generated Model Elements.

Plug-ins

Modularisation Plug-in

The Modularisation Plug-in provides facilities for structuring Event-B developments into logical units of modelling, called modules. The module concept is very close to the notion Event-B development (a refinement tree of Event-B machines). However, unlike a conventional development, a module comes with an interface. An interface defines the conditions on how a module may be incorporated into another development (that is, another module). The plug-in follows an approach where an interface is characterised by a list of operations specifying the services provided by the module. An integration of a module into a main development is accomplished by referring operations from Event-B machine actions using an intuitive procedure call notation.

UML-B Improvements

Southampton is in charge of UML-B plug-in.

A new version of UML-B is being developed that will have improved integration with Event-B. The new version will be built as an extension to the EMF framework for Event-B. While this new version is being developed improvements are also being made to the existing version of UML-B. Both topics are covered in more detail on the following page: UML-B Integration and Improvements

ProB Plug-in

Düsseldorf is in charge of ProB.

Work already performed

We have now ported ProB to work directly on the Rodin AST. Animation is working and the user can now set a limited number of preferences. The model checking feature is now also accessible. It is also possible to create CSP and classical B specification files. These files can be edited with BE4 and animated/model checked with ProB. On the classical B side we have moved to a new, more robust parser (which is now capable of parsing some of the more complicated AtelierB specifications from Siemens).

On the developer side, we have moved to a continuous integration infrastructure using CruiseControl. Rodin is also building from CVS in that infrastructure.

Developers can build tools on top of ProB using the ProB API.

Ongoing and future developments

We are currently developing a new, better user interface. We also plan to support multi-level animation with checking of the gluing invariant.

We have prototypes for several extensions working, but they need to be fully tested and integrated into the plugin:

  • an inspector that allows the user to inspect complex predicates (such as invariants or guards) as well as expressions in a tree-like manner
  • a graphical animator based on SWT that allows the user to design his/her own animations easily within the tool
  • a 2D viewer to inspect the state space of the specification

B2Latex Plug-in

Southampton is in charge of B2Latex.

Kriangsak Damchoom will update the plug-in to add extensions of events.

Event Model Decomposition (A-style)

Systerel (Carine) is in charge of this task.

For more details on Event Model Decomposition, see Event Model Decomposition.

The purpose of (A-style) event model decomposition is to cut a heavy event system into smaller pieces which can be handled more comfortably than the whole. More precisely, each piece can then be refined independently of the others.

Parallel Composition Plug-in

Southampton is in charge of the Parallel Composition using Event-B .

The purpose of the plug-in is to allow the parallel composition of several Event-B machines into a composite machine. The machine composition uses a shared event composition, where separate machines operate on disjoint variables and machines interact by synchronising on events that may share parameters.

This plug-in allows:

  • Selection of machines that will be part of the composition (Includes Section)
  • Possible selection of an abstract machine (Refines Section)
  • Possible inclusion of invariants that relate the included machines (Invariant Section and use of the monotonicity )
  • Invariants of included machines are conjoined.
  • Selection of events that will be merged. The event(s) must come from different machines. At the moment, events with parameters with same name are merged. If it is a refinement composition, it is possible to choose the abstract event that is being refined.
  • Initialisation event is the parallel composition of all the included machines' initialisations.
  • For a composed event, the guards are conjoined and the all the actions are composed in parallel.

Currently, after the conclusion of the composition machine, a new machine can be generated, resulting from the properties defined on the composition file. This allows proofs to be generated as well as a visualisation of the composition machine file. In the future, the intention is to make the validation directly on the composition machine file directly where proofs would be generated ( and discharged) - the new machine generation would be optional. An event-b model for the validation/generation of proofs in currently being developed. Another functionality which should be quite useful for the composition (but not restricted to that) is renaming:

  • while composing, two machines may have variables with the same name for instance (which is not allowed for this type of composition). In order to solve this problem, one would have to rename one of the variables in order to avoid the clash, which would mean change the original machine. A possible solution for that would be to rename the variable but just on composition machine file, keeping the original machine intact. A renaming framework designed and developed by Stefan Hallerstede and Sonja Holl exists currently although still on a testing phase. The framework was developed to be used in a general fashion (not constrained to event-b syntax). The idea is to extend the development of this framework and apply to Event-B syntax (current development).

There is a prototype for the composition plug-in available that works for Rodin 0.9.2.1 available from the Rodin Main Update Site soon, under 'Shared Event Composition'.

Refactoring Framework Plug-in

Southampton is in charge of the Refactoring Framework.

The intention of the plug-in is to allow the renaming/refactoring of elements on a file (and possible related files). Although created to be used in a general way, the idea is to embed this framework on the Rodin platform, using Event-B syntax. This plug-in was initially designed and developed by Stefan Hallerstede and Sonja Holl.

This plug-in allows:

  • Defining extensions that can be used to select related files.
  • Defining extesions that can be used to rename elements based on the type of file.
  • Renaming of elements on a file and possible occurrences on related files.
  • Generating of a report of possible problems (clashes) that can occur while renaming.

Measurement Plug-In

The Measurement Plug-In to the RODIN platform will provide information both about the model itself and about the process of building the model. It has a double purpose:

  • provide feedback to the user about the quality of the Event-B model he is building and about potential problems in it or in the way he is building it.
  • automate the data collection process for the measurement and assessment WP. This data collected will be analyzed to identify global transfer (increase in model quality, size, complexity,...), tool shortcomings (usability, prover), modelling issues (to be addressed by training, language, tool evolution,...), etc.

Generic Instantiation

The context of a machine can be viewed as defining the parameters of that machine (carrier sets, constants, axioms). These parameters make a machine generic. We propose an approach for instantiating Event-B machines by replacing generic sets and constants with more specific sets and constants. The axioms of a context represent assumptions on the sets and constants that need to be satisfied whenever the machine is instantiated. The instantiation leads to proof obligations to ensure that the generic axioms are satisfied by the instantiation. For more details see Generic Instantiation page.

Rule-based Extensible Prover

Southampton is in charge of devising an extensible rule-based prover.

In order to extend the prover with new rewrite and inference rules, it is necessary to write Java code adding to the appropriate extension points. That way, it becomes very difficult to verify the soundness of the implemented rules. We propose a mechanism by which the prover can be extended with new rewrite rules and inference rules without compromising its soundness. Our proposal follows a similar approach employed by Event-B: generating proof obligations. We, initially, focus on adding the facility to specify rewrite rules. We envisage the mechanism to evolve to cover inference rules as well as the many mathematical extensions proposed in Mathematical_extensions. For more details, we refer to the Rule-based_Prover_Plug-in page. and File:Rule-based Prover Proposal.pdf.

From Event-B lemmas to SMT-LIB benchmarks

[Systerel] (Carine) is in charge of this task.

For more details on Event-B to SMT-LIB, see Event-B to SMT-LIB.

The purpose of the plug-in is to translate mathematical lemmas that rely on the Event-B language to the SMT-LIB format.

New Proof Rules

This document describes the set of newly added reasoners for improving the usability of the prover within Rodin Platform.

Exploratory Tasks

Template Base Exporter

Some prototyping work is done in python, to explore how to use template engines to export rodin models to text, Latex, docbook, mediawiki,... The mercurial repository is available here. You can cloned it by installing mercurial on your computer and doing hg clone https://bitbucket.org/matclab/rodin_exporter/.

Be warn that, for now, it bypass the rodin database API and does parse the .bum and .buc files directly. It is also highly experimental, so do not rely to much on the produced output.

(This work is done by Mathieu on its spare time...)

Others

AnimB

Christophe devotes some of its spare time for this plug-in.

For more details on AnimB Current Developments, see AnimB Current Developments.

The current developments around the AnimB plug-in encompass the following topics:

Live animation update
where the modification of the animated event-B model is instantaneously taken into account by the animator, without the need to restart the animation.
Collecting history
The history of the animation will be collected.

Team-Based Development

Usage Scenarios
In order to understand the problem properly, Düsseldorf created a number of usage Scenarios for Team-based Development.
A page has also been opened for merging proofs scenarios.


Team working based on EMF Compare
The EMF Compare project provides a comparison/merging style editor (similar to the Java merging editor used for synchronising changes with code repositories). This could be used to synchronise model changes into a repository such as SVN. The use of the EMF Compare editor relies on the EMF representation of Event-B that has already been developed and is available. A prototype plug-in is available which enables the use of the EMF compare editor for Rodin Machines and Contexts. It is intended that deploy partners will try out this plug-in in order to gather requirements for the Teamwork plug-in.
More details are here: Team-based development

Wishlist

A wish list of tool plug-ins that cannot be resourced by Deploy is maintained.