- Source: Alt-Ergo
Alt-Ergo, an automatic solver for mathematical formulas, is mainly used in formal program verification. It operates on the principle of satisfiability modulo theories (SMT). Development was undertaken by researchers at the Paris-Sud University, Laboratoire de Recherche en Informatique, Inria Saclay Ile-de-France, and CNRS. Since 2013, project management and oversight has been conducted by OCamlPro company. It is released under the free and open-source software CeCILL-C license.
Technologies
= Design choices
=Alt-Ergo employs a specialized input language with prenex polymorphism, designed to reduce the number of axioms requiring quantification and to simplify the complexity of problems. While Alt-Ergo offers partial support for the SMT-LIB 2 language, its efficiency with SMT files is comparatively limited.
= Main components
=The core architecture of Alt-Ergo comprises three main elements: a depth-first search (DFS)-based SAT solver, a quantifiers instantiation engine that uses e-matching, and an assembly of decision procedures for a range of built-in theories. These components collectively enable Alt-Ergo's abilities in automatic formula solving.
= Built-in theories
=Alt-Ergo implements (semi-)decision procedures for the following theories:
Empty theory
Linear integer arithmetic
Linear rational arithmetic
Non-linear arithmetic
Floating point arithmetic
Polymorphic arrays
Enumerated data types
AC symbols
Record data types
Industrial uses
Several verification platforms are built on Alt-Ergo:
Why3, a platform for deductive program verification, uses Alt-Ergo as main prover
CAVEAT, a C-verifier developed by CEA and used by Airbus; Alt-Ergo was included in the qualification DO-178C of one of its aircraft
Frama-C, a framework to analyse C-code, uses Alt-Ergo in the Jessie and WP plugins (dedicated to deductive program verification)
SPARK, uses Alt-Ergo (behind GNATprove) to automate the verification of some assertions in Spark 2014
Atelier-B can use Alt-Ergo instead of its main prover (raising success from 84% to 98% on ANR Bware project benchmarks)
Rodin, a B-method framework developed by Systerel, can use Alt-Ergo as a back-end
Cubicle, an open source model checker to verify safety properties of array-based transition systems
EasyCrypt, a toolset for reasoning about relational properties of probabilistic computations with adversarial code
BWARE
Cafein
FUI Hi-Lite
Decert
ADT Alt-Ergo
A3PAT
See also
Formal verification
Z3 Theorem Prover
References
External links
Official website, OcamlPro
Alt-Ergo at LRI
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- René Descartes
- Alt-Ergo
- Satisfiability modulo theories
- Ergo Proxy
- SPARK (programming language)
- OCaml
- List of open-source software for mathematics
- Automated theorem proving
- Frama-C
- Alternative medicine
- Ergo (journal)