{"id":152862,"date":"2005-07-01T00:00:00","date_gmt":"2005-07-01T00:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.microsoft.com\/en-us\/research\/msr-research-item\/verifying-properties-of-well-founded-linked-lists\/"},"modified":"2018-10-16T20:19:50","modified_gmt":"2018-10-17T03:19:50","slug":"verifying-properties-of-well-founded-linked-lists","status":"publish","type":"msr-research-item","link":"https:\/\/www.microsoft.com\/en-us\/research\/publication\/verifying-properties-of-well-founded-linked-lists\/","title":{"rendered":"Verifying Properties of Well-Founded Linked Lists"},"content":{"rendered":"
We describe a novel method for verifying programs that manipulate linked lists, based on two new predicates that characterize reachability of heap cells. These predicates allow reasoning about both acyclic and cyclic lists uniformly with equal ease. The crucial insight behind our approach is that a circular list invariably contains a distinguished head cell that provides a handle on the list. This observation suggests a programming methodology that requires the heap of the program at each step to be well-founded, i.e., for any field mytf in the program, every sequence u.mytf ,u.mytf .mytf ,\u2026 contains at least one head cell. We believe that our methodology captures the most common idiom of programming with linked data structures. We enforce our methodology by automatically instrumenting the program with updates to two auxiliary variables representing these predicates and adding assertions in terms of these auxiliary variables. To prove program properties and the instrumented assertions, we provide a first-order axiomatization of our two predicates. We also introduce a novel induction principle made possible by the well-foundedness of the heap. We use our induction principle to derive from two basic axioms a small set of additional first-order axioms that are useful for proving the correctness of several programs. We have implemented our method in a tool and used it to verify the correctness of a variety of nontrivial programs manipulating both acyclic and cyclic singly-linked lists and doubly-linked lists.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n
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We describe a novel method for verifying programs that manipulate linked lists, based on two new predicates that characterize reachability of heap cells. These predicates allow reasoning about both acyclic and cyclic lists uniformly with equal ease. The crucial insight behind our approach is that a circular list invariably contains a distinguished head cell that 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