Comparison of specification decomposition methods in Event-B
- Authors: Devyanin P.N.1, Kulyamin V.V.2,3,4, Petrenko A.K.2,3,4, Khoroshilov A.V.2,5, Shchepetkov I.V.2
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Affiliations:
- Educational Information Security Community
- Institute for System Programming
- Moscow State University, Moscow, 119991 Russia GSP-1
- National Research University Higher School of Economics
- Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology
- Issue: Vol 42, No 4 (2016)
- Pages: 198-205
- Section: Article
- URL: https://journal-vniispk.ru/0361-7688/article/view/176437
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.1134/S0361768816040022
- ID: 176437
Cite item
Abstract
Decomposition is an important phase in the design of medium and large-scale systems. Various architectures of software systems and decomposition methods are studied in numerous publications. Presently, formal specifications of software systems are mainly used for experimental purposes; for this reason, their size and complexity are relatively low. As a result, in the development of a nontrivial specification, different approaches to the decomposition should be compared and the most suitable approach should be chosen. In this paper, the experience gained in the deductive verification of the formal specification of the mandatory entity-role model of access and information flows control in Linux (MROSL DP-model) using the formal Event-B method and stepwise refinement technique is analyzed. Two approaches to the refinementbased decomposition of specifications are compared and the sources and features of the complexity of the architecture of the model are investigated.
About the authors
P. N. Devyanin
Educational Information Security Community
Author for correspondence.
Email: peter_devyanin@hotmail.com
Russian Federation, Moscow
V. V. Kulyamin
Institute for System Programming; Moscow State University, Moscow, 119991 Russia GSP-1; National Research University Higher School of Economics
Email: peter_devyanin@hotmail.com
Russian Federation, ul. Solzhenitsyna 25, Moscow, 109004; Leninskie Gory, Moscow, 119991; 1-nd Kozhukhovsky proezd 1/7, Moscow, 101000
A. K. Petrenko
Institute for System Programming; Moscow State University, Moscow, 119991 Russia GSP-1; National Research University Higher School of Economics
Email: peter_devyanin@hotmail.com
Russian Federation, ul. Solzhenitsyna 25, Moscow, 109004; Leninskie Gory, Moscow, 119991; 1-nd Kozhukhovsky proezd 1/7, Moscow, 101000
A. V. Khoroshilov
Institute for System Programming; Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology
Email: peter_devyanin@hotmail.com
Russian Federation, ul. Solzhenitsyna 25, Moscow, 109004; Institutskii per. 9, Dolgoprudnyi, Moscow oblast, 141700
I. V. Shchepetkov
Institute for System Programming
Email: peter_devyanin@hotmail.com
Russian Federation, ul. Solzhenitsyna 25, Moscow, 109004
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