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Report from the Working Group on “Methods in HCSS”

Report from the Working Group on “Methods in HCSS”. Azer Bestavros. Azer Bestavros, BU Matthew Dwyer, UNL Allen Goldberg, Kestrel Paul Jones, FDA Martha Matzke, NCO Paul Miner, NASA Cesar Munoz, NIA. David von Oheimb, Siemens Calton Pu, GTech John Rushby, SRI Lui Sha, UIUC

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Report from the Working Group on “Methods in HCSS”

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  1. Report from the Working Group on “Methods in HCSS” Azer Bestavros

  2. Azer Bestavros, BU Matthew Dwyer, UNL Allen Goldberg, Kestrel Paul Jones, FDA Martha Matzke, NCO Paul Miner, NASA Cesar Munoz, NIA David von Oheimb, Siemens Calton Pu, GTech John Rushby, SRI Lui Sha, UIUC Bill Spees, FDA Reinhard Wilhelm, Saarland Participants

  3. What do we mean by “Methods”? • A “method” is a systematic process for specification, analysis, verification, development, and validation of a system

  4. Participants Backgrounds

  5. Know thy method’s limit • A method is as good as the model of the system on which it is built – this is the “Heisenberg principle” at work… • Claims of correctness must always have a disclaimer about the limitations of the underlying model and assumptions

  6. Domain knowledge is key • Successful methods are those that are well-integrated with an application domain • Domain knowledge informs and enriches both the models and the methods • It is rather hard to perform cross-domain analysis – e.g., how could timing and power analysis leverage each other

  7. Cost/Benefit Proposition • Integrating verification and certification processes with development processes reduces costs considerably • Also, it results in better developed systems and practices • The application of verification methods must be seamless – barrier to entry should be sufficiently low

  8. Complexity Reduction • Models need to be rich (complex) enough to be able to deal with the “frame” problem • Models should be “resource aware” • Interfaces should reflect assumptions about behaviors (e.g., dynamics) • Models need to be simple enough for scalability of verification

  9. Complexity Reduction • Need to adopt an “hour-glass” paradigm for verification and validation – apply methods to intermediate abstract models of systems • Need to figure out what are these “right” abstract models • Interactions involving critical components must be simple

  10. Manageability of “Bugs” • Distinguish between manageable versus unmanageable residual bugs • Verify absence of unmanageable bugs and develop strategies for dealing with manageable bugs • Bugs that are visible through an established interface may be manageable, whereas those that open up new “interfaces” are unmanageable

  11. Challenges ~ 3 years • Many specific challenges • Automated methods fit for deployment • Timing validation of IMA (single board) • Leverage byproducts of method application • Develop methods and frameworks for integrating disparate analyses and verification methodologies • Develop better methods/architectures for establishing/enabling non-interference

  12. Which is the right perspective? • “Design only what you can analyze” versus “Resilience against the unknown unknowns” • “Make COTS systems certifiable” versus “Make certifiable systems COTS” • Aviation software is the tip of the iceberg and is trivial compared to complex medical systems of the future…

  13. Education • Recognize the professional nature of the practice • Need to create demand for new programs (e.g., masters) • “Aviation software” may be too narrow to create enough demand – solicit consortium of broader industries in “high-confidence software and systems”

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