source: CIVL/README@ bd85fa4

1.23 2.0 main test-branch
Last change on this file since bd85fa4 was 83c054c, checked in by Manchun Zheng <zmanchun@…>, 12 years ago

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git-svn-id: svn://vsl.cis.udel.edu/civl/trunk@730 fb995dde-84ed-4084-dfe6-e5aef3e2452c

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1 CIVL: The Concurrency Intermediate Verification Language
2 v 0.8
3
4------------------------------ Overview -------------------------------
5
6CIVL is a framework encompassing...
7
8 * a programming language, CIVL-C, which adds to C a number of
9 concurrency primitives, as well as the ability to define
10 functions in any scope. Together, these features make for
11 a very expressive concurrent language that can faithfully
12 represent programs using various APIs and parallel languages,
13 such as MPI, OpenMP, CUDA, and Chapel. CIVL-C also provides
14 a number of primitives supporting verification.
15 * a model checker which uses symbolic execution to verify a
16 number of safety properties of CIVL-C programs. The model
17 checker can also be used to verify that two CIVL-C programs
18 are functionally equivalent.
19 * a number of translators from various commonly-used languages
20 and APIs to CIVL-C. (This part is still a work in progress.)
21
22CIVL is developed by the Verified Software Laboratory at the
23University of Delaware Department of Computer Science.
24For more information, visit http://vsl.cis.udel.edu/civl
25
26Developers:
27
28Stephen F. Siegel
29Timothy K. Zirkel
30Manchun Zheng
31Ziqing Luo
32
33------------------------------- License -------------------------------
34
35CIVL is open source software distributed under the GNU
36General Public License. However, the libraries used by CIVL
37(and incorporated into the complete distribution) use various
38licenses. See directory licenses for the license of each component.
39
40-------------------------- Updates from v 0.7 -------------------------
41
421. Dyscopes are now first-class objects, like processes and other types.
43 Refer to CIVL Manual Section 6.2.2 for more details about $scope expressions.
44
452. Interfaces for message passing are significantly simplified. Refer to
46 CIVL Manual Section 7.3.2 and examples/messagePassing for more details.
47
483. $wait is not implemented as a system function declared in civlc.h,
49 instead of a language primitive. So the syntax becomes "$wait(p)"
50 instead of "$wait p".
51
524. There is no longer a $heap type. Instead, every dynamic scope has its
53 own heap automatically. The $malloc function has been modified to take
54 a scope as its first argument, e.g., $malloc($here, sizeof(int)).
55
56------------------------- Binary Installation -------------------------
57
58For most users, this will be the easiest way to install and use CIVL.
59
601. Install a Java 7 SDK if you have not already. Go to
61http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/javase/downloads/ for the
62latest from Oracle. On linux, you can optionally sudo apt-get install
63openjdk-7-jdk.
64
652. If you already have the VSL dependencies library, you may
66skip this step. Otherwise, download the archive of VSL
67dependencies from http://vsl.cis.udel.edu/tools/vsl_depend,
68choosing the version for your OS type (32-bit linux,
6964-bit linux, or 64-bit OS X). Unzip and untar the
70downloaded .tgz file and you will have a folder named "vsl".
71If you do not already have a directory /opt, create one with
72"mkdir /opt". Move vsl into /opt. Use sudo as needed.
73
743. Download the appropriate CIVL distribution from
75http://vsl.cis.udel.edu/civl.
76
774. Unzip and untar the downloaded file if this does not happen
78automatically. This should result in a folder named
79CIVL-TAG, where TAG is some version id string. This folder
80contains the following:
81
82 - README : this file
83 - bin : containing one executable sh script called "civl"
84 - lib : containing civl-TAG.jar
85 - doc : containing the manual and the tutorial of CIVL
86 - licenses : licenses for CIVL and included libraries
87 - examples : some example CIVL programs
88
895. Move CIVL-TAG into /opt.
90
916. Put the civl script in your path however you like to put things
92in your path. Either move it to a directory in your path,
93or create a symlink to it, or edit your .profile or equivalent
94to put it in your path.
95
96------------------------- Source Installation -------------------------
97
98We recommend using the Eclipse IDE for Java/EE developers.
99
1001. Install an SVN plugin in Eclipse (such as Subversive) if you have
101 not already.
102
1032. Install prerequisite projects ABC, SARL and GMC.
104 Make sure that the three projects are put in the workspace
105 directory where CIVL will be put.
106
107 a. Install the C front-end ABC. In Eclipse,
108 select New Project...from SVN, use the archive
109 svn://vsl.cis.udel.edu/abc. After entering that, open it
110 up and select the "trunk". After checking out trunk, name
111 the project "ABC". Then follow the instructions in the INSTALL
112 file for Eclipse installation. Build the abc.jar from within
113 Eclipse by right-clicking (or ctrl-clicking on OS X) on the
114 build.xml file and selecting Run As->Ant Build.
115
116 b. Install the symbolic algebra and reasoning library SARL.
117 In Eclipse, select New Project...from SVN, use the archive
118 svn://vsl.cis.udel.edu/sarl. After entering that, open it
119 up and select the "trunk". After checking out trunk, name
120 the project "SARL". Then follow the instructions in the INSTALL
121 file for Eclipse installation. Build the sarl.jar from within
122 Eclipse by right-clicking (or ctrl-clicking) on the build.xml
123 file and selecting Run As->Ant Build.
124
125 c. Install the generic model checking utilities package GMC.
126 In Eclipse, select New Project...from SVN, use the archive
127 svn://vsl.cis.udel.edu/gmc. After entering that, open it
128 up and select the "trunk". After checking out trunk, name
129 the project "GMC". Build the gmc.jar from within Eclipse
130 by right-clicking (or ctrl-clicking) on the build.xml file and
131 selecting Run As->Ant Build.
132
1333. From within Eclipse, select New Project...from SVN. The archive is
134svn://vsl.cis.udel.edu/civl. After entering that, open it up and
135select the "trunk". (It is simplest to just check out the trunk for
136the Eclipse project.)
137
1384. Check out the trunk, and create the project using the New Java
139Project Wizard as usual, naming it "CIVL". The .project, .classpath,
140and other Eclipse meta-data are already in the SVN archive, saving you
141a bunch of work.
142
1435. If you already have the VSL dependencies library, you may
144skip this step.
145
146Download the tgz archive of VSL dependencies from
147 http://vsl.cis.udel.edu/tools/vsl_depend,
148 choosing the right .tgz according to your platform:
149
150 vsl_linux32-1.0.tgz - 32-bit linux
151 vsl_linux64-1.0.tgz - 64-bit linux
152 vsl_osx64-1.0.tgz - 64-bit osx
153
154 Unzip the .tgz file and you will have the folder vsl.
155 Move vsl to /opt (you might need to use sudo for this.
156 Also, if you don't already have a directory called /opt,
157 you will have to create it with mkdir /opt).
158
159 Suppose that you put the .tgz file (or .tar file if your browser
160 unzipped it automatically to a .tar file) in the directory $Download.
161 You can use the following commands:
162
163 $ cd $Download
164 $ tar xzf YourTgzOrTarFile vsl
165 $ sudo mv vsl /opt
166
167 Now you can type "ls /opt/vsl", and the output should be
168
169 README.txt lib licenses src
170
1716. If default_build.properties matches the configuration of your system,
172 then you can skip this step. Otherwise, you may need to create a file
173 build.properties in the directory where build.xml is in.
174 Copy and paste the content from any file under properties, edit each
175 entry with the path configured in your system. The newly created file
176 build.properties will automatically be used by ant to to build the .jar file.
177
1787. Navigate to Preferences -> Java -> Build Path -> ClassPath
179 Variables, and then select New to create a classpath variable VSL,
180 and specify its value to be /opt/vsl. Navigate to Preferences -> Run/Debug
181 -> String Substitution -> New, and then define an entry vsl_lib and
182 set its value to be /opt/vsl/lib.
183
1848. Do a clean build. Everything should compile. Generate the civl.jar
185 by right-clicking (or ctrl-click on OS X) the build.xml file and
186 Run As->Ant Build.
187
1889. Go to Run->Run Configurations... Create a new JUnit configuration.
189 Name it CIVL Tests. Select "Run all tests in the selected project..."
190 and navigate to the folder "test" in the CIVL project.
191 The Test runner should be JUnit 4. Under the Arguments tab, type
192 "-ea" (without the quotes) in the VM arguments area (to enable assertion
193 checking). Under the Environment tab, create an entry
194 DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH (OS X) or LD_LIBRARY_PATH (linux),
195 specify its value by clicking Variables and choose vsl_lib from the list,
196 or you may type ${vsl_lib} in the value entry.
197
19810. An example of how to set up a single test from within Eclipse:
199 create a new Run Configuration via the Run->Run
200 Configurations... menu. Create a new "Java Application"
201 configuration. Call it "CIVL barrier2". The Project is CIVL. The
202 main class is edu.udel.cis.vsl.civl.CIVL. Under the Arguments tab,
203 set the Program arguments to "examples/barrier2.cvl" (without the
204 quotes). Modify the VM arguments and the Environment as in the step
205 above. You should now be able to run the test by clicking "Run".
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