The FLINT Project

Research

People

Publications

Software

Support

Links

Internal

Position Paper: The Science of Deep Specification

Last modified: Sun Apr 15 22:13:20 2018 GMT.

Authors

Lennart Beringer
Adam Chlipala
Benjamin Pierce
Zhong Shao
Stephanie Weirich
Steve Zdancewic

Abstract

We introduce our efforts within the project "The science of deep specification" to work out the key formal underpinnings of industrial-scale formal specifications of software and hardware components, anticipating a world where large verified systems are routinely built out of smaller verified components that are also used by many other projects. We identify an important class of specification that has already been used in a few experiments that connect strong component-correctness theorems across the work of different teams. To help popularize the unique advantages of that style, we dub it deep specification, and we say that it encompasses specifications that are rich, two-sided, formal and live (terms that we define in the article). Our core team is developing a proof-of-concept system (based on the Coq proof assistant) whose specification and verification work is divided across largely decoupled subteams at our four institutions, encompassing hardware microarchitecture, compilers, operating systems and applications, along with cross-cutting principles and tools for effective specification. We also aim to catalyse interest in the approach, not just by basic researchers but also by users in industry.

Published

In Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A, Volume 375, issue 2104, 24 pages, October 2017.
  • Online paper [HTML, PDF]

  • Copyright © 1996-2024 The FLINT Group <flint at cs dot yale dot edu>
    Yale University Department of Computer Science
    Validate this page
    colophon