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Relation Algebra for Coq

Webpage of the project: http://perso.ens-lyon.fr/damien.pous/ra

DESCRIPTION

This Coq development is a modular library about relation algebra: those algebras admitting heterogeneous binary relations as a model, ranging from partially ordered monoid to residuated Kleene allegories and Kleene algebra with tests (KAT).

This library presents this large family of algebraic theories in a modular way; it includes several high-level reflexive tactics:

  • [kat], which decides the (in)equational theory of KAT;
  • [hkat], which decides the Hoare (in)equational theory of KAT (i.e., KAT with Hoare hypotheses);
  • [ka], which decides the (in)equational theory of KA;
  • [ra], a normalisation based partial decision procedure for Relation algebra;
  • [ra_normalise], the underlying normalisation tactic.

The tactic for Kleene algebra with tests is obtained by reflection, using a simple bisimulation-based algorithm working on the appropriate automaton of partial derivatives, for the generalised regular expressions corresponding to KAT.

Combined with a formalisation of KA completeness, and then of KAT completeness on top of it, this provides entirely axiom-free decision procedures for all model of these theories (including relations, languages, traces, min-max and max-plus algebras, etc...).

Algebraic structures are generalised in a categorical way: composition is typed like in categories, allowing us to reach "heterogeneous" models like rectangular matrices or heterogeneous binary relations, where most operations are partial. We exploit untyping theorems to avoid polluting decision algorithms with these additional typing constraints.

APPLICATIONS

We give a few examples of applications of this library to program verification:

  • a formalisation of a paper by Dexter Kozen and Maria-Cristina Patron. showing how to certify compiler optimisations using KAT.
  • a formalisation of the IMP programming language, followed by: 1/ some simple program equivalences that become straightforward to prove using our tactics; 2/ a formalisation of Hoare logic rules for partial correctness in the above language: all rules except the assignation one are proved by a single call to the hkat tactic.
  • a proof of the equivalence of two flowchart schemes, due to Paterson. The informal paper proof takes one page; Allegra Angus and Dexter Kozen gave a six pages long proof using KAT; our Coq proof is about 100 lines.

INSTALLATION

The easiest way to install this library is via OPAM. For the current stable release of Coq, the library can be installed directly through the released repository:

opam repo add coq-released https://coq.inria.fr/opam/released
opam install coq-relation-algebra

Otherwise, use the provided opam file using opam pin add . (from the project directory)

To compile manually use ./configure --enable-ssr to enable building the finite types model (requires coq-mathcomp-ssreflect). Also use --enable-aac to enable building the bridge with AAC rewriting tactics (requires coq-aac-tactics). Then compile using make and install using make install.

DOCUMENTATION

Each module is documented, see index.html or http://perso.ens-lyon.fr/damien.pous/ra for:

  • a description of each module's role and dependencies
  • a list of the available user-end tactics
  • the coqdoc generated documentation.

LICENSE

This library is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.

This library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU Lesser General Public License for more details.

You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public License along with this library. If not, see http://www.gnu.org/licenses/.

AUTHORS

  • Main author

    • Damien Pous (2012-), CNRS - LIP, ENS Lyon (UMR 5668), France
  • Additional authors

    • Christian Doczkal (2018-), CNRS - LIP, ENS Lyon (UMR 5668), France
    • Insa Stucke (2015-2016), Dpt of CS, University of Kiel, Germany
    • Coq development team (2013-)