Using ProB with KODKOD: Difference between revisions

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You can also have a look at these Wiki pages:
You can also have a look at these Wiki pages:
* [[Proving_Theorems_in_the_ProB_REPL]]
* [[Proving_Theorems_in_the_ProB_REPL]]
* [[Argumentation_Theory Argumentation Theory Example]]
* [[Argumentation_Theory|Argumentation Theory Example]]

Revision as of 09:16, 6 July 2017


As of version 1.3.5 ProB can make use of Kodkod as an alternate way of solving constraints. Kodkod provides a relational interface to SAT solvers and is also by the Alloy tool.

How to enable Kodkod

For the command-line version you need to call prob as follows:

probcli -p KODKOD TRUE

Note: to experiment with Kodkod you may want to try out the command:

probcli -p KODKOD TRUE -repl

If in addition you want see a graphical representation of the solutions found you can use the following command and open the out.dot file using dotty or GraphViz:

probcli -p KODKOD TRUE -repl -evaldot ~/out.dot

For the ProB Tcl/Tk Version you should select the menu command "Enable Kodkod for Properties" in the Preferences menu.

What can be translated

  • Types:
    • Basic Types: Deferred Sets, enumerated sets, integers, booleans
    • Sets of basic types
    • Relations between basic types
    • Higher-order types (sets of sets) are not supported
  • Operators:
    • Predicates: &, or, =>, <=>, not, !, #, =, /=
    • Booleans: TRUE, FALSE, BOOL, bool(...)
    • Sets: {..,...} {x|P}, POW, card, Cartesian product, \/, /\, -, :, /:, /<:, <<: /<<:
    • Numbers: n..m, >, <, >=, <=, +, -, *, SIGMA(x).(P|x)
    • Relations: <->, |->, dom, ran, id, <|, <<|, |>, |>>, ~, [...], <+, prj1, prj2, closure1
    • x : S+->T, x:S-->T, ..., lambda
    • currently no operations on sequences are supported
  • Some limitations:
    • If integers are used, a predicate can only be translated if a static analysis can estimate the interval of its possible values.
    • Generally only complete predicates are translated or nothing at all, unless you set the KODKOD_ONLY_FULL preference to FALSE.

When is the Kokod translation used

Once enabled, the Kodkod translation will be used in the following circumstances:

  • for solving PROPERTIES
  • constraint-based assertion checking (-cbc_assertions command for probcli or the "Check Assertions on Constants" command in the menu Verify -> Constraint-Based Checking)
  • constraint-based deadlock checking
  • in the Eval Console in the ProB Tcl/Tk version
  • for the REPL in probcli (probcli -p KODKOD TRUE -repl)

SAT solver

By default Kodkod in ProB uses the bundled SAT4J solver. You can switch to using minisat by putting a current version of libminisat.jnilib into ProB's lib directory.

Similarly, as of ProB 1.6.1-beta5 you can also use the Solver lingeling or glucose by dropping liblingeling.dylib or libglucose.dylib into ProB's lib folder (for Mac OS X; for Linux the extension will be different). You can control the solver being used using the KODKOD_SAT_SOLVER preference (which has four possible values: sat4j, minisat, lingeling, glucose).

These files can be downloaded from the Kodkod download site.

More Preferences

If you set KODKOD_ONLY_FULL to FALSE, then the Kodkod translation can be applied to part of a predicate. In other words, the predicate (such as the PROPERTIES) are partitioned into two parts: one that can be understood by Kodkod and the rest which will be dealt with by ProB's solver.

You can also enable symmetry by using the preference KODKOD_SYMMETRY. By default, ProB will set this value to 0, i.e., symmetry is off. This means that Kodkod can also be used within set comprehensions. By setting the preference to a value higher than 0 you will enable symmetry within Kodkod, which may mean that not all solutions will be returned. Setting the value too high may be counter productive; Kodkod's recommended default is 20.

Finally, you can control the number of solutions that Kodkod computes in one go using the preference KODKOD_MAX_NR_SOLS. E.g., if you are interested in only one solution and KODKOD_ONLY_FULL is TRUE, then you should set this value to 1.

More details

You can also have a look at these Wiki pages: