On 1 Jul 2022, at 00:59, Chris Johns 
<chr...@rtems.org<mailto:chr...@rtems.org>> wrote:

On 28/6/2022 11:09 pm, 
andrew.butterfi...@scss.tcd.ie<mailto:andrew.butterfi...@scss.tcd.ie> wrote:

Dear RTEMS Developers,

While the validation tests from the RTEMS pre-qualification activity are
now merged into the RTEMS master, the work done in investigating and
deploying formal methods techniques is not yet merged.

The activity had two main phases: a planning phase (Nov 2018-Oct 2019)
that explored various formal techniques, followed by an execution phase
(Oct 2019-Nov 2021) that then applied selected techniques to selected
parts of RTEMS. Some discussions occurred with the RTEMS community
via the mailings lists over this time. A short third phase (Nov 2021 - Dec 2021)
then reported on the outcomes. Each phase resulted in a technical report.

The key decision made was to use Promela/SPIN for test generation, and
to apply it to the Chains API, the Event Manager, and the SMP scheduler
thread queues. This involved developing models in the Promela language
and using the SPIN model-checker tool to both check their correctness
and to generate execution scenarios that could be used to generate tests.
Tools were developed using Python 3.8 to support this. Initial documentation
about tools and how to use them was put into the 2nd phase report.

Congratulations for the work and results you and others have managed to achieve.
It is exciting to see this happening with RTEMS and being made public.


We now come to the part where we explore the best way to integrate this
into RTEMS. I am proposing to do this under the guidance of Sebastian Huber.

The first suggested step is adding in new documentation to the RTEMS
Software Engineering manual, as a new Formal Methods chapter. This would
provide some motivation, as well as a "howto".

I assume that I would initially describe the proposed changes using the patch
review process described in the section on Preparing and Sending Patches in
the User Manual.

How do you feel I should best proceed?

It is hard for me to answer until I understand what is being submitted and who
maintains it? I am sure you understand this due to the specialised nature of the
work.

Indeed, I quite agree.  I have some short answers below, with suggestions.



What will be submitted, ie SPIN files, scripts, etc?

Promela/SPIN model files (ASCII text, C-like syntax)
C template files (.h,.c) to assist test code generation
YAML files to provide a mapping from model concepts to RTEMS C test code
python scripts to automate the test generation
Documentation - largely RTEMS compliant sphinx sources (.rst)


Where are you looking to add these pieces?

Everything except the documentation could live in a top-level folder ('formal') 
in rtems-central.
In fact there is no particular constraint from my perspective for where they 
can go.

The plan would be to add the pertinent parts of our project documentation into 
new chapters
in the RTEMS software engineering manual. So that would be eng/ in the 
rtems-docs repo.



How is the verification run against the code? Do we manage regression testing
and is that even possible?

The python scripts basically run SPIN in such a way as to generate scenarios 
that model
correct behaviour which then get turned into standard RTEMS test programs. 
These all
get added into a new testsuite in the rtems repo (testsuites/models, say).
They are properly integrated into the RTEMS test system, so get built and run 
by waf.
This is similar to how the tests generated by Sebastian in 
testsuites/validation are handled.

From the perspective of a user that works out of 
git.rtems.org/rtems<http://git.rtems.org/rtems>,
there will be no obvious impact - just some extra tests in among the ones that 
already exist.


I hope my simple questions highlight a lack of understand on how this works and
how we maintain it and use it once integrated.

I intend to continue to work and maintain this for the foreseeable future. I 
would hope as this beds in that other Promela/SPIN users out there will also 
get more involved over time.

It is expected that Promela models will be as static as the corresponding APIs. 
They capture the specified behaviour of API calls, not their detailed 
implementation.

The python scripts should also be fairly stable, although I can see some 
tweaking for a while to improve workflow issues that might arise.

There are some extra python libraries that are required over and above what is 
currently specified in rtems-central/requirements.txt


Thanks
Chris

Thanks,
  Andrew



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