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Semantics of Boogie in \K
Seth Poulsen ([email protected])
Nishant Rodrigues ([email protected])
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Introduction

In this project, we present an executable formal semantics for Boogie, an intermediate language for verification. We choose to implement this in the \K Framework because of its semantics-first approach, and our belief that this approach extends to verification languages.

Indeed, we believe that \K's approach removes the need for verification languages and that we can implement verification constructs tailored to a language within \K itself, with only a little effort beyond the language semantics itself. This will do away with the need for a translation of the source language to an intermediate language, and with it the pitfalls of writing multiple implementations of the language.

To prove that we are in fact capable of everything Boogie is, we define such an executable semantics for Boogie itself. The semantics of Boogie were informally defined in the paper "This is Boogie 2". Our semantics follows the semantics as defined there as much as possible, adding increased formality where the informal semantics are vague. The section numbering in the Syntax and Semantics listed in this document also follows the section numbering from "This is Boogie 2." Since the

Organization

The source code of our semantics is organized as follows:

  • [syntax.md] contains the formal grammar for the Boogie language.

  • [boogie.md] contains the majority of the semantics.

  • Since Boogie is a verification language, there are a few features that rely on a "meta-level" implementations. First, to present the results of verifying a program we must consider the result of all possible executions of our program (as opposed to a traditional language where we only care about a single execution trace). This is done in [frontend/frontend.md].

    Second, Boogie allows quantification. This involves symbolically executing our program, and considering all possible instantiations of the quantified variables. This is done in [quantification.md].

Building

To build the semantics and run the tests, first install the ninja build system, and all the dependencies for the K Framework as described on their github page. Then clone this repository and run

./build

The build script will download and build the \K Framework, then use it to build and execute the Boogie semantics.

Running ./docker-dev will also build a Docker image with all dependencies installed.

Current support

  • Integer and Boolean types
  • assert & assume statements
  • Traditional imperative control flow
  • invariant, requires and ensures specifications
  • old() expressions
  • Non-deterministic if statements and while loops
  • Non-deterministic assignment of variables using havoc
  • call statements

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