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Abstract state machine

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In computer science, an abstract state machine (ASM) is a state machine operating on states that are arbitrary data structures (structure in the sense of mathematical logic, that is a nonempty set together with a number of functions (operations) and relations over the set).

Overview

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The ASM Method is a practical and scientifically well-founded systems engineering method that bridges the gap between the two ends of system development:

  • the human understanding and formulation of real-world problems (requirements capture by accurate high-level modeling at the level of abstraction determined by the given application domain)
  • the deployment of their algorithmic solutions by code-executing machines on changing platforms (definition of design decisions, system and implementation details).

The method builds upon three basic concepts:

  • ASM: a precise form of pseudo-code, generalizing finite-state machines to operate over arbitrary data structures
  • ground model: a rigorous form of blueprints, serving as an authoritative reference model for the design
  • refinement: a most general scheme for stepwise instantiations of model abstractions to concrete system elements, providing controllable links between the more and more detailed descriptions at the successive stages of system development.

In the original conception of ASMs, a single agent executes a program in a sequence of steps, possibly interacting with its environment. This notion was extended to capture distributed computations, in which multiple agents execute their programs concurrently.

Since ASMs model algorithms at arbitrary levels of abstraction, they can provide high-level, low-level and mid-level views of a hardware or software design. ASM specifications often consist of a series of ASM models, starting with an abstract ground model and proceeding to greater levels of detail in successive refinements or coarsenings.

Due to the algorithmic and mathematical nature of these three concepts, ASM models and their properties of interest can be analyzed using any rigorous form of verification (by reasoning) or validation (by experimentation, testing model executions).

History

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The concept of ASMs is due to Yuri Gurevich, who first proposed it in the mid-1980s as a way of improving on Turing's thesis that every algorithm is simulated by an appropriate Turing machine. He formulated the ASM Thesis: every algorithm, no matter how abstract, is step-for-step emulated by an appropriate ASM. In 2000, Gurevich axiomatized the notion of sequential algorithms, and proved the ASM thesis for them. Roughly stated, the axioms are as follows:

  • states are structures,
  • the state transition involves only a bounded part of the state, and
  • everything is invariant under isomorphisms of structures. (Structures can be viewed as algebras, which explains the original name evolving algebras for ASMs.)

The axiomatization and characterization of sequential algorithms have been extended to parallel and interactive algorithms.

In the 1990s, through a community effort,[1] the ASM method was developed, using ASMs for the formal specification and analysis (verification and validation) of computer hardware and software. Comprehensive ASM specifications of programming languages (including Prolog, C, and Java) and design languages (UML and SDL) have been developed.

A detailed historical account can be found elsewhere.[2][3]

A number of software tools for ASM execution and analysis are available.

Publications

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Books

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Behavioral models for industrial standards

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  • OMG for BPMN (version 2006): Springer LNCS 5316
  • OASIS for BPEL: IJBPMI 1.4 (2006)
  • ECMA for C#: "A high-level modular definition of the semantics of C♯" doi:10.1016/j.tcs.2004.11.008
  • ITU-T for SDL-2000: formal semantics of SDL-2000 and Formal Definition of SDL-2000 - Compiling and Running SDL Specifications as ASM Models
  • IEEE for VHDL93: E.Boerger, U.Glaesser, W.Mueller. Formal Definition of an Abstract VHDL'93 Simulator by EA-Machines. In: Carlos Delgado Kloos and Peter T.~Breuer (Eds.), Formal Semantics for VHDL, pp. 107–139, Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1995
  • ISO for Prolog: "A mathematical definition of full Prolog" doi:10.1016/0167-6423(95)00006-E

Tools

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(in historical order since 2000)

Bibliography

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References

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  1. ^ Bowen, Jonathan P. (2021). "Communities and Ancestors Associated with Egon Börger and ASM". In Raschke, Alexander; Riccobene, Elvinia; Schewe, Klaus-Dieter (eds.). Logic, Computation and Rigorous Methods: Essays Dedicated to Egon Börger on the Occasion of His 75th Birthday. Lecture Notes in Computer Science. Vol. 12750. Springer International Publishing. pp. 96–120. doi:10.1007/978-3-030-76020-5_6. ISBN 978-3-030-76019-9. S2CID 235414337.
  2. ^ "AsmBook Home Page". Italy: University of Pisa. November 2005. Retrieved 8 June 2021. (Chapter 9)
  3. ^ Börger, Egon (2002). "The Origins and the Development of the ASM Method for High Level System Design and Analysis". Journal of Universal Computer Science . 8 (1). doi:10.3217/jucs-008-01-0002.
  4. ^ Bowen, Jonathan P. (November 2018). "Egon Börger and Alexander Raschke: Modeling companion for software practitioners". Formal Aspects of Computing. 30 (6): 761–762. doi:10.1007/s00165-018-0472-4. S2CID 53086556.
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