Abstract

Constraint programming solvers, such as Satisfiability Modulo Theory (SMT) solvers, are capable tools in finding preferable configurations for embedded systems from large design spaces. However, constructing SMT constraint programs is not trivial, in particular for complex systems that exhibit multiple viewpoints and models. In thisarticle we propose CoDeL: a component-based description language that allows system designers to express components as reusable building blocks of the system with their parameterizable properties, models, and interconnectivity. Systems are synthesized by allocating, connecting, and parameterizing the components to satisfy the requirements of an application. We present an algorithm that transforms component-based design spaces, expressible in CoDeL, to an SMT program, which, solved by state-of-the-art SMT solvers, determines the satisfiability of the synthesis problem, and delivers a correct-by-construction system configuration. Evaluation results for use cases in the domain of scheduling and mapping of distributed real-time processes confirm, first, the performance gain of SMT compared to traditional design space exploration approaches, second, the usability gains by expressing design problems in CoDeL, and third, the capability of the CoDeL/SMT approach to support the design of embedded systems.

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