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Sidestepping verification complexity with supervisory control. Ugo Buy Department of Computer Science Houshang Darabi Department of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering University of Illinois at Chicago. Outline. Background P-invariant-based mutex enforcement Net unfolding Assessment. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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26 September 2003 U. Buy -- SEES 2003
Sidestepping verification complexity with supervisory
control
Ugo BuyDepartment of Computer Science
Houshang DarabiDepartment of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering
University of Illinois at Chicago
26 September 2003 U. Buy -- SEES 2003 2
Outline• Background• P-invariant-based mutex enforcement• Net unfolding• Assessment
26 September 2003 U. Buy -- SEES 2003 3
Acknowledgements
• Panos Antsaklis, Michael Lemmon, Univ. of Notre Dame
• Starthis Corporation, Rosemont, Illinois• NIST/ATP program• Graduate students Bharat Sundararaman and
Vikram Venepally
26 September 2003 U. Buy -- SEES 2003 4
Background• Supervisory control methods for discrete event
systems (DES)— Enforcing concurrency and real-time properties
of embedded systems— Model DES with Finite Automata (FA) or Petri
nets— Add controller that enforces desired properties
to system model• Supervisory control vs. verification
— Potential benefits of supervisory control— Likely obstacles to widespread applicability
26 September 2003 U. Buy -- SEES 2003 5
Definitions• Discrete Event System (DES) is characterized by:
1. Discrete state set2. Event-driven state transitions
• Supervisory controller of a DES:— Given controlled system (a DES) and
correctness property,— supervisor restricts DES behaviors in such a way
that combined system will satisfy the property• Observable and controllable events
26 September 2003 U. Buy -- SEES 2003 6
Why Supervisory Control?• Some SC methods for DES are much more tractable
than verification algorithms• Promising methods:
1. P-invariant-based supervisors (mutex properties)2. Unfolding of Petri nets (deadlock, RT deadlines)
• Caveat:—System must be sufficiently observable,
controllable to permit supervisor definition
26 September 2003 U. Buy -- SEES 2003 7
Why Petri nets?1. Support tractable supervisory control algorithms
• P-invariants and net unfoldings• Automata-based supervisors usually intractable
2. Widely used in some embedded applications• Sequential Function Charts (SFCs) widely used
in manufacturing applications— Part of IEC 61131 standard— Supported by Matlab, RSLogix 5000
26 September 2003 U. Buy -- SEES 2003 8
Petri nets• Ordinary Petri net: Bipartite, directed graph
N=(P,T,F,m0) With: node sets P and T,
arc set F, andinitial marking m0
• Supervisory control problem: Given controlled net N and property P, generate subnet S (supervisor) that restricts N behaviors to satisfy P
26 September 2003 U. Buy -- SEES 2003 9
Enforcing Mutex Constraints• Exploit property of Petri net P-invariants
— Place subset such that weighted sum of tokens in subset is constant in all reachable net markings
— Computed by finding integer solutions x to invariant equation involving incidence matrix D of Petri net:
x·D = 0
26 September 2003 U. Buy -- SEES 2003 10
Examples of P-invariants
t1 t2
t3
t4 t5
p2p1 p3
p4p5
p6
p7
P-invariants:
{ p1, p4 }{ p2, p5, p7}{ p1, p2, p4, p5, p7 }…(unit coefficients)
26 September 2003 U. Buy -- SEES 2003 11
P-invariant based supervisorsMethod (Yamalidou et al. 96)1. Specify mutex properties as linear inequalities on
reachable markings of controlled netl1,1·m1 + l1,2·m2 + l1,3·m3 + … <= b1
l2,1·m1 + l2,2·m2 + l2,3·m3 + … <= b2
…lk,1·m1 + lk,2·m2 + lk,3·m3 + … <= bk
2. Treat constraints matrix as invariant equation, find Petri net (controller) satisfying P-invariant
26 September 2003 U. Buy -- SEES 2003 12
Supervisor synthesis
• Supervisor net defined by simple matrix
multiplicationDC = – L ·D
— L is matrix of mutex constraints— D is incidence matrix of controlled net
• Supervisor net will have k places, zero transitions— k is number of mutex constraints
• Supervisor will be maximally permissive
26 September 2003 U. Buy -- SEES 2003 13
Example of supervisor generation• The readers and writers example without mutex:
• Mutex constraints:p6 + p9 + p10 <≤ 1
p7 + p9 + p10 <≤ 1
p8 + p9 + p10 <≤ 1
26 September 2003 U. Buy -- SEES 2003 14
Example (cont’d)
• The readers and writers example with supervisor:
26 September 2003 U. Buy -- SEES 2003 15
Advantages of Mutex Supervisors
• Complexity proportional to D (aka controlled system) and L (constraints)— Overall complexity polynomial for broad class of
mutex constraints• Supervisors generated are small (no transitions)• Maximally permissive supervisors
26 September 2003 U. Buy -- SEES 2003 16
Limitations of Mutex Supervisors
• Cannot guarantee net liveness (e.g., freedom from deadlock)
• Open issues:— Integration with other supervisors— Priorities on mutex enforcement policy— Empirical evaluation of constraint size
26 September 2003 U. Buy -- SEES 2003 17
Unfolding Petri nets• Transform net into acyclic net capturing repetitive
bevahiors of original net• Unfolding appeal:
— Capture causal relationship on transition firing— Identify choice points— Identify fundamental execution paths
• History of net unfolding— McMillan 92, Esparza et al. 02, He and Lemmon
02, Semenov and Yakovlev 96 (time Petri nets)
26 September 2003 U. Buy -- SEES 2003 18
Net unfolding: Definitions• Node x in net N precedes node y if there is path
from x to y in N— Write x<y
• Node x in conflict with y if N contains paths diverging immediately after a place p and leading to x and y— Write x#y
• Node x in self-conflict if N contains paths diverging immediately after a place p and leading to x— Write x#x
26 September 2003 U. Buy -- SEES 2003 19
Unfolding untimed netsGiven net N, unfolding of N is a net U subject such
that: 1. Nodes in U are mapped to nodes in N 2. Each place in U has at most one input transition3. Net U is acyclic4. No U node is in self conflict5. Completeness property: Every reachable marking
of N is in U
26 September 2003 U. Buy -- SEES 2003 20
Example of unfolding
The original net:t1 t2
t8t7
t3 t4
t5 t6
p2p1 p3
p4p5
p6
p7 p8
p9
26 September 2003 U. Buy -- SEES 2003 21
Example of unfolding
t1 t2
t7
t3 t4
t5 t6
p2p1 p3
p4p5 p6
p7
p9
p2’
p9’
p5’
p9” p9’”
t5’ t6’p8 p7’ p8’
t3’ t4’
p1’ p3’p2’’
t8
The unfolded net:
26 September 2003 U. Buy -- SEES 2003 22
Applications of unfolding
• Enforcing freedom from deadlock (He and Lemmon 02)— Deadlocks detected directly in unfolding— Eliminate deadlocks by dynamically disabling
transition that causes deadlock• Enforcing compliance with real-time deadlines
(Buy and Darabi 03)— Latency of transition t: upper bound on the
delay between the firing of t and the time when a target transition can be fired
26 September 2003 U. Buy -- SEES 2003 23
A New Programming Paradigm?1. Design/Code concurrent system without paying
attention to correctness properties2. Submit system description and property
specification to supervisor generator3. Generator adds supervisor to original system4. Allegedly, a very long shot…
26 September 2003 U. Buy -- SEES 2003 24
Future work1. Integration of supervisors for different properties2. Refine properties enforced3. System, property specifications