Talks and Poster Presentations (with Proceedings-Entry):
A. Svozil, W. Dvorak, K. Chatterjee, M. Henzinger:
"Quasipolynomial Set-Based Symbolic Algorithms for Parity Games";
Talk: International Conference on Logic for Programming, Artificial Intelligence and Reasoning (LPAR),
Awassa, Ethiopia;
2018-11-16
- 2018-11-21; in: "LPAR 2018 : International Conference on Logic for Programming, Artificial Intelligence and Reasoning",
EasyChair Publications, in the EPiC Series in Computing,
57
(2018),
233
- 253.
English abstract:
Solving parity games, which are equivalent to modal μ-calculus model checking, is a central algorithmic problem in formal methods, with applications in reactive synthesis, program repair, verification of branching-time properties, etc. Besides the standard compu- tation model with the explicit representation of games, another important theoretical model of computation is that of set-based symbolic algorithms. Set-based symbolic algorithms use basic set operations and one-step predecessor operations on the implicit description of games, rather than the explicit representation. The significance of symbolic algorithms is that they provide scalable algorithms for large finite-state systems, as well as for infinite-state systems with finite quotient. Consider parity games on graphs with n vertices and parity conditions with d priorities. While there is a rich literature of explicit algorithms for parity games, the main results for set-based symbolic algorithms are as follows: (a) the basic algorithm that requires O(nd) symbolic operations and O(d) symbolic space; and (b) an improved algorithm that requires O(nd/3+1) symbolic operations and O(n) symbolic space. In this work, our contributions are as follows: (1) We present a black-box set-based symbolic algorithm based on the explicit progress measure algorithm. Two important consequences of our algorithm are as follows: (a) a set-based symbolic algorithm for parity games that requires quasi-polynomially many symbolic operations and O(n) symbolic space; and (b) any future improvement in progress measure based explicit algorithms immediately imply an efficiency improvement in our set-based symbolic algorithm for parity games. (2) We present a set-based symbolic algorithm that requires quasi-polynomially many symbolic operations and O(d · log n) symbolic space. Moreover, for the important special case of d ≤ log n, our algorithm requires only polynomially many symbolic operations and poly-logarithmic symbolic space.
Keywords:
Graph games, model checking, parity games, progress measure, symbolic computation
Created from the Publication Database of the Vienna University of Technology.