Registration is open for AFM 2017 (http://fm.csl.sri.com/AFM17). AFM has a workshop on May 19 at SRI International, and a day of tutorials on May 20 at Menlo College. The cost of registration is $50 a day (+ 3% for credit card payments). Note that we do not have hotel arrangements. Breakfast, lunch, and breaks are included. Payment will be accepted at the meetings.
The sixth Automated Formal Methods (AFM) workshop will be held during May 19-20, 2017, at SRI International and Menlo College in Menlo Park. The earlier workshops were AFM06, AFM07, AFM08, AFM09, and AFM10. The 2017 workshop immediately follows the NASA Formal Methods (NFM) 2017 symposium. It consists of both invited talks and contributed papers on May 19, and tutorials covering recent progress in tools such as PVS, SAL/SALLY/HybridSAL, Yices, SeaHorn, Radler, and Bixie. AFM functions both as a user's meeting for SRI's tools such as PVS, SAL, and Yices, and as a workshop for those interested in state of the art automation for formal methods generally. Workshop Description AFM is a workshop centered around the use and integration of highly automated formal verification tools for specification, interactive theorem proving, satisfiability (SAT) and satisfiability modulo theories (SMT), model checking, program verification, static analysis, runtime verification, code generation, and testing, as well as interfaces, documentation, and education. This workshop was originally initiated as a users' group meeting for the SRI formal verification tools, which now include PVS, SAL, HybridSAL, SALLY, Yices, NL-Yices, Joogie, Bixie, and SeaHorn, together with technologies under development, such as ARSENAL, Radler, Occam, PCE, and ETB. However, topics are not restricted to these tools: we welcome contributions on all aspects of state of the art automation. The proceedings of the workshop will be published through the ACM Digital Library. Workshop Program The program includes contributed papers and invited talks selected by the international program committee on May 19, and a series of tutorials on May 20, 2017. Program Committee Saddek Bensalem (Verimag) Matthew Bolton (Buffalo) Maria Paola Bonacina (Verona) Alessandro Coglio (Kestrel Institute) Bruno Dutertre (SRI, co-Chair) Leonard Gerard (SRI) Stephane Graham-Lengrand (Ecole Polytechnique) Arie Gurfinkel (U. of Waterloo) Liana Hadarean (Synopsys) Ben Hocking (Dependable Computing) Susmit Jha (SRI) Dejan Jovanovic (SRI) Temesghen Kahsai (CMU West) Aditya Kanade (IISc, Bangalore) Wenchao Li (Boston University) Paolo Masci (Queen Mary) Mariano Moscato (NIA) Cesar Munoz (NASA Langley) Anitha Murugesan (Honeywell Research) Jorge Navas (SRI) Natasha Neogi (NIA) Sam Owre (SRI) Lee Pike (Galois) Elvinia Riccobene (Milan) Kristin Rozier (Iowa) John Rushby (SRI) Martin Schaef (SRI) Natarajan Shankar (SRI, co-Chair) Wilfried Steiner (TTTech) Ashish Tiwari (SRI) Alan Wassyng (McMaster University) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Check out the vibrant tech community on one of the world's most engaging tech sites, Slashdot.org! http://sdm.link/slashdot _______________________________________________ hol-info mailing list hol-info@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/hol-info