Model Checking a C++ Software Framework, a Case Study

June 29, 2019 Β· Declared Dead Β· πŸ› ESEC/SIGSOFT FSE

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Authors John LΓ₯ng, I. S. W. B. Prasetya arXiv ID 1907.00172 Category cs.SE: Software Engineering Citations 2 Venue ESEC/SIGSOFT FSE Last Checked 3 months ago
Abstract
This paper presents a case study on applying two model checkers, SPIN and DIVINE, to verify key properties of a C++ software framework, known as ADAPRO, originally developed at CERN. SPIN was used for verifying properties on the design level. DIVINE was used for verifying simple test applications that interacted with the implementation. Both model checkers were found to have their own respective sets of pros and cons, but the overall experience was positive. Because both model checkers were used in a complementary manner, they provided valuable new insights into the framework, which would arguably have been hard to gain by traditional testing and analysis tools only. Translating the C++ source code into the modeling language of the SPIN model checker helped to find flaws in the original design. With DIVINE, defects were found in parts of the code base that had already been subject to hundreds of hours of unit tests, integration tests, and acceptance tests. Most importantly, model checking was found to be easy to integrate into the workflow of the software project and bring added value, not only as verification, but also validation methodology. Therefore, using model checking for developing library-level code seems realistic and worth the effort.
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