We study the expressiveness and reactive synthesis problem of HyperQPTL, a logic that specifies omega-regular hyperproperties. HyperQPTL is an extension of linear-time temporal logic (LTL) with explicit trace and propositional quantification and therefore truly combines trace relations and omega-regularity. As such, HyperQPTL can express promptness, which states that there is a common bound on the number of steps up to which an event must have happened. We demonstrate how the HyperQPTL formulation of promptness differs from the type of promptness expressible in the logic Prompt-LTL. Furthermore, we study the realizability problem of HyperQPTL by identifying decidable fragments, where one decidable fragment contains formulas for promptness. ...
HyperLTL, the extension of Linear Temporal Logic by trace quantifiers, is a uniform framework for ex...
Prompt-LTL extends Linear Temporal Logic with a bounded version of the “eventually” operator to expr...
Hyperproperties, as introduced by Clarkson and Schneider, characterize the correctness of a computer...
We study the reactive synthesis problem for hyperproperties given as formulas of the temporal logic ...
We study the reactive synthesis problem for hyperproperties given as formulas of the temporal logic...
Information security properties of reactive systems like non-interference often require relating dif...
Hyperproperties, which generalize trace properties by relating multiple traces, are widely studied i...
We study the satisfiability and model-checking problems for timed hyperproperties specified with Hyp...
Abstract. Two new logics for verification of hyperproperties are pro-posed. Hyperproperties characte...
Hyperproperties, such as non-interference and observational determinism, relate multiple system exec...
Hyperproperties are properties of systems that relate different executions traces, with many applica...
We investigate the logical foundations of hyperproperties. Hyperproperties generalize trace properti...
Realizability and reactive synthesis from temporal logics are fundamental problems in the formal ver...
We study the satisfiability and model-checking problems for timed hyperproperties specified with Hyp...
We study satisfiability for HyperLTL with a ∀∗∃∗ quantifier prefix, known to be highly undecidable i...
HyperLTL, the extension of Linear Temporal Logic by trace quantifiers, is a uniform framework for ex...
Prompt-LTL extends Linear Temporal Logic with a bounded version of the “eventually” operator to expr...
Hyperproperties, as introduced by Clarkson and Schneider, characterize the correctness of a computer...
We study the reactive synthesis problem for hyperproperties given as formulas of the temporal logic ...
We study the reactive synthesis problem for hyperproperties given as formulas of the temporal logic...
Information security properties of reactive systems like non-interference often require relating dif...
Hyperproperties, which generalize trace properties by relating multiple traces, are widely studied i...
We study the satisfiability and model-checking problems for timed hyperproperties specified with Hyp...
Abstract. Two new logics for verification of hyperproperties are pro-posed. Hyperproperties characte...
Hyperproperties, such as non-interference and observational determinism, relate multiple system exec...
Hyperproperties are properties of systems that relate different executions traces, with many applica...
We investigate the logical foundations of hyperproperties. Hyperproperties generalize trace properti...
Realizability and reactive synthesis from temporal logics are fundamental problems in the formal ver...
We study the satisfiability and model-checking problems for timed hyperproperties specified with Hyp...
We study satisfiability for HyperLTL with a ∀∗∃∗ quantifier prefix, known to be highly undecidable i...
HyperLTL, the extension of Linear Temporal Logic by trace quantifiers, is a uniform framework for ex...
Prompt-LTL extends Linear Temporal Logic with a bounded version of the “eventually” operator to expr...
Hyperproperties, as introduced by Clarkson and Schneider, characterize the correctness of a computer...