Integrating deduction and model finding in a language independent setting
Abstract
Software artifacts are ubiquitous in our lives being an essential part of
home appliances, cars, cel phones, and even in more critical activities like
aeronautics and health sciences. In this context software failures may produce
enormous losses, either economical or, in the extreme, in human lives. Software
analysis is an area in software engineering concerned on the application of
different techniques in order to prove the (relative) absence of errors in
software artifacts. In many cases these methods of analysis are applied by
following certain methodological directives that ensure better results. In a
previous work we presented the notion of satisfiability calculus as a model
theoretical counterpart of Meseguer's proof calculus, providing a formal
foundation for a variety of tools that are based on model construction. The
present work shows how effective satisfiability sub-calculi, a special type of
satisfiability calculi, can be combined with proof calculi, in order to provide
foundations to certain methodological approaches to software analysis by
relating the construction of finite counterexamples and the absence of proofs,
in an abstract categorical setting.