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CSL 2018

Quantifying Bounds in Strategy Logic

Conference Paper Accepted Paper Logic in Computer Science · Theoretical Computer Science

Abstract

Program synthesis constructs programs from specifications in an automated way. Strategy Logic (SL) is a powerful and versatile specification language whose goal is to give theoretical foundations for program synthesis in a multi-agent setting. One limitation of Strategy Logic is that it is purely qualitative. For instance it cannot specify quantitative properties of executions such as "every request is quickly granted", or quantitative properties of trees such as "most executions of the system terminate". In this work, we extend Strategy Logic to include quantitative aspects in a way that can express bounds on "how quickly" and "how many". We define Prompt Strategy Logic, which encompasses Prompt LTL (itself an extension of LTL with a prompt eventuality temporal operator), and we define Bounded-Outcome Strategy Logic which has a bounded quantifier on paths. We supply a general technique, based on the study of automata with counters, that solves the model-checking problems for both these logics.

Authors

Keywords

  • Prompt LTL
  • Strategy Logic
  • Model checking
  • Automata with counters

Context

Venue
Annual Conference on Computer Science Logic
Archive span
1988-2026
Indexed papers
1413
Paper id
74829460874760094