Abstract

The correctness of many algorithms and data structures depends on reachability properties, that is, on the existence of chains of references between objects in the heap. Reasoning about reachability is difficult for two main reasons. First, any heap modification may affect an unbounded number of reference chains, which complicates modular verification, in particular, framing. Second, general graph reachability is not supported by first-order SMT solvers, which impedes automatic verification. In this paper, we present a modular specification and verification technique for reachability properties in separation logic. For each method, we specify reachability only locally within the fragment of the heap on which the method operates. We identify relative convexity, a novel relation between the heap fragments of a client and a callee, which enables (first-order) reachability framing, that is, extending reachability properties from the heap fragment of a callee to the larger fragment of its client, enabling precise procedure-modular reasoning. Our technique supports practically important heap structures, namely acyclic graphs with a bounded outdegree as well as (potentially cyclic) graphs with at most one path (modulo cycles) between each pair of nodes. The integration into separation logic allows us to reason about reachability and other properties in a uniform way, to verify concurrent programs, and to automate our technique via existing separation logic verifiers. We demonstrate that our verification technique is amenable to SMT-based verification by encoding a number of benchmark examples into the Viper verification infrastructure.

Highlights

  • Separation logic [Reynolds 2002] has greatly simplified the verification of basic heap data structures such as lists and trees by leveraging the disjointness of sub-heaps to reason about the effects of heap modifications

  • We presented our technique for enabling modular reasoning about heap reachability in combination with first-order separation logic

  • We presented a specification and verification technique that allows one to reason about heap reachability properties modularly

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Summary

Introduction

Separation logic [Reynolds 2002] has greatly simplified the verification of basic heap data structures such as lists and trees by leveraging the disjointness of sub-heaps to reason about the effects of heap modifications. Verifying data structures that permit unbounded sharing remains challenging. Their correctness often depends on heap reachability properties, that is, the existence of paths of references between objects. The path compression of union-find needs to preserve the reachability of the root object, the termination of heap traversals might rely on the. Lang., Vol 3, No OOPSLA, Article 121.

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