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About

RTAMT-CPP is a C++ library for online monitoring of bounded-future Signal Temporal Logic (STL).

Installation

Dependencies

sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install build-essential cmake uuid-dev
sudo apt-get install libgtest-dev google-mock libgmock-dev

Building the project

mkdir bin
cd bin
cmake ../source
make -j4

Generating the grammar

How to compile the grammar. Note that the library is released with the pre-compiled library. The grammar needs to be compiled only if you change the parser or the lexer.

cd grammar/stl
java -jar ../../antlr-4.8-complete.jar -package grammar -Dlanguage=Cpp -no-listener -visitor StlLexer.g4 -o ../../source/grammar
java -jar ../../antlr-4.8-complete.jar -package grammar -Dlanguage=Cpp -no-listener -visitor StlParser.g4 -o ../../source/grammar

Theory

RTAMT-CPP is a C++ library for online monitoring of bounded-future Signal Temporal Logic (STL). The library is inspired by several theoretical and practical works:

  • The overall library is inspired by RTAMT and implements the same functionlity in C++ instead of Python
  • The bounded-future fragment of STL is inspired by [2]
  • The interface-aware interpretation of STL quantitative semantics is inspired by [3]
  • The periodic-sampling interpretation of specifications (even in presence of timestamps that are not prefectly periodic) is inpired by [4]
  • The translation of bounded-future STL to "equirobust" past STL prior to the monitoring phase is inpired by [2]

Specification Language

RTAMT-CPP uses the bounded-future interface-aware fragment of Signal Temporal Logic (STL).

The library supports a variant of STL with past and future temporal operators as well as basic arithmetic and absolute value operators. Semantics of STL is defined in terms of a robustess degree rho(phi,w,t), a function defined over reals extended with +inf and -inf that takes as input an STL specification phi, an input signal w and time index t, and computes how far is the signal w at time t from satisfying/violating phi. The robustness degree function is defined inductively as follows (c is a real constant, x is a variable, w_x(t) denotes the value of w projected to x at time t, a,b are rational constants such that 0 <= a <= b and |w| is the length of w):

% Constant
rho(c,w,t) = c

% Variable
rho(x,w,t) = w_x(t)

% Absolute value
rho(abs(phi),w,t) = |rho(phi,w,t)|

% Arithmetic operators
rho(phi + psi,w,t) = rho(phi,w,t) + rho(psi,w,t)
rho(phi - psi,w,t) = rho(phi,w,t) - rho(psi,w,t)
rho(phi * psi,w,t) = rho(phi,w,t) * rho(psi,w,t)
rho(phi / psi,w,t) = rho(phi,w,t) / rho(psi,w,t)

% Numeric predicates
rho(phi <= psi,w,t) = rho(psi,w,t) - rho(phi,w,t) 
rho(phi < psi,w,t) = rho(psi,w,t) - rho(phi,w,t)
rho(phi >= psi,w,t) = rho(phi,w,t) - rho(psi,w,t)
rho(phi >= psi,w,t) = rho(phi,w,t) - rho(psi,w,t)
rho(phi == psi,w,t) = -|rho(phi,w,t) - rho(psi,w,t)|
rho(phi !== psi,w,t) = |rho(phi,w,t) - rho(psi,w,t)|

% Boolean operators
rho(not(phi),w,t) = -rho(phi,w,t)
rho(phi or psi,w,t) = max(rho(phi,w,t),rho(psi,w,t))
rho(phi and psi,w,t) = min(rho(phi,w,t),rho(psi,w,t))
rho(phi -> psi,w,t) = max(-rho(phi,w,t),rho(psi,w,t))
rho(phi <-> psi,w,t) = -|rho(phi,w,t) - rho(psi,w,t)|
rho(phi xor psi,w,t) = |rho(phi,w,t) - rho(psi,w,t)|

% Events
rho(rise(phi),w,t) = rho(phi,w,t)                     if t=0
                     min(-rho(phi,w,t-1),rho(phi,w,t) otherwise
rho(fall(phi),w,t) = -rho(phi,w,t)                    if t=0
                     min(rho(phi,w,t-1),-rho(phi,w,t) otherwise

% Past untimed temporal operators
rho(once phi,w,t) = max_{t' in [0,t]} rho(phi,w,t')
rho(historically phi,w,t) = min_{t' in [0,t]} rho(phi,w,t')
rho(phi since psi,w,t) = max_{t' in [0,t]}(min(rho(psi,w,t'), min_{t'' in (t',t]}rho(psi,w,t') rho(phi,w,t'')))

% Past untimed temporal operators
rho(once[a,b] phi,w,t) = -inf                                                            if t-a < 0
                         max_{t' in ([0,t] intersect [t-a,t-b])} rho(phi,w,t')           otherwise
rho(historically[a,b] phi,w,t) = inf                                                     if t-a < 0
                                 min_{t' in ([0,t] intersect [t-a,t-b])} rho(phi,w,t')   otherwise
rho(phi since[a,b] psi,w,t) = -inf                                                       if t-a < 0 
                              max_{t' in ([0,t] intersect [t-a,t-b]} (min(rho(psi,w,t'), 
                              min_{t'' in (t',t]}rho(psi,w,t') rho(phi,w,t'')))          otherwise

% Future untimed temporal operators
rho(eventually phi,w,t) = max_{t' in [0,t]} rho(phi,w,t')
rho(always phi,w,t) = min_{t' in [0,t]} rho(phi,w,t')

% Future timed temporal operators
rho(eventually[a,b] phi,w,t) = -inf                                                     if t+a >= |w|
                               max_{t' in ([0,t] intersect [t+a,t+b])} rho(phi,w,t')    otherwise
rho(always[a,b] phi,w,t) = inf                                                          if t+a >= |w|
                           min_{t' in ([0,t] intersect [t+a,t+b])} rho(phi,w,t')        otherwise
rho(phi until[a,b] psi,w,t) = -inf                                                      if t+a >= |w|
                              max_{t' in ([0,t] intersect [t+a,t+b]}(min(rho(psi,w,t'), 
                              min_{t'' in [t,t')}rho(psi,w,t') rho(phi,w,t'')))         otherwise   

We define the robustness degree rho(phi,w) as rho(phi,w,0).

There are several important points to note about the above syntax and semantics:

  • The library allows only bounded-future STL specifications, meaning that unbounded future operators always and eventually can appear only at the top level of the specification. For example, always(x<=2) is a bounded-future STL specification, while always(eventually(x<=2)) is not.
  • The library does not allow unbounded until operator.
  • The library uses non-standard semantics for unbounded always and eventually operators. For instance, standard TL semantics says that always phi holds at time t iff phi holds at all future times t'>=t. This interpretation cannot be monitored in online fashion. We define semantics that says that always phi holds at time t iff phi has been continuously holding so far. Note that this interpretation of always is equivalent to the historicallyoperator. The situation is symmetric for the non-standard semantics of eventually and once.

We can see from the semantics of bounded-future STL that the direct evaluation of a formula phi at time t may depend on inputs at t'>t that have not arrived yet. The library monitors bounded-future STL formulas with a fixed delay. In order to compute rho(phi,w,t), the monitor waits for all inputs required to evaluate phi to become available before computing the robustness degree. This delay is fixed and depends on the specification. For instance, the specification always((req >= 3) -> eventually[0:2]always[0:3](gnt >= 3)is evaluated with delay 5 - the time needed to capture all inputs required for evaluating bounded eventually and always operators. We refer the reader to [2] for algorithmic details regarding monitoring with delay.

Usage

Example of a standard usage

The use of the library is illustrated with the following example.

#include <rtamt/stl_specification.hpp>
#include <rtamt/stl_exception.hpp>

using namespace std;
using namespace rtamt;
using In = Input;

int main(int argc, char **argv) {
    StlSpecification spec;

    spec.name("Bounded-response Request-Grant");
    
    spec.declare_var("req", Type::FLOAT);
    spec.declare_var("gnt", Type::FLOAT);
    spec.declare_var("out", Type::FLOAT);
    
    spec.var_io_type("req", StlIOType::IN);
    spec.var_io_type("gnt", StlIOType::OUT);
    
    spec.default_unit(Unit::MS);
    spec.sampling_period(10, Unit::MS, 0.1);
    
    spec.semantics(StlSemantics::STANDARD);
    
    spec.spec("out = (req >= 3) -> (eventually[0:50ms](gnt >= 3))");
    
    spec.parse();
    
    double out;
    
    out = spec.update(0, {In("req", 0.0), In("gnt", 0.0)}); // out = inf
    out = spec.update(10, {In("req", 0.0), In("gnt", 0.0)}); // out = inf
    out = spec.update(20, {In("req", 0.0), In("gnt", 0.0)}); // out = inf
    out = spec.update(30, {In("req", 6.0), In("gnt", 0.0)}); // out = inf
    out = spec.update(40, {In("req", 6.0), In("gnt", 0.0)}); // out = inf
    out = spec.update(50, {In("req", 0.0), In("gnt", 0.0)}); // out = 3
    out = spec.update(60, {In("req", 0.0), In("gnt", 0.0)}); // out = 3
    out = spec.update(70, {In("req", 0.0), In("gnt", 6.0)}); // out = 3
    out = spec.update(80, {In("req", 0.0), In("gnt", 6.0)}); // out = 3
    out = spec.update(90, {In("req", 0.0), In("gnt", 0.0)}); // out = 3
    out = spec.update(100, {In("req", 0.0), In("gnt", 0.0)}); // out = 3
    out = spec.update(110, {In("req", 0.0), In("gnt", 0.0)}); // out = 3
}


The user first names the specification using the spec.name() function. The explicit naming of the specification is optional and is intended to facilitate tracing of the formal specifications and monitors to the requirements. The default value for the STL specification name is "STL Specification".

Next, the user needs to declare typed variables that are used in the specification. In this example, the program declares three variables req, gnt and out, all of them of type float.

In addition, the program declares req as input (StlIOType::IN) and gnt as output (StlIOType::OUT) variable. The definition of the I/O signatures for specification variables is optional. Variables have by default a neutral default type (StlIOType::DEFAULT). The I/O signature indicates whether a variable is an input (output) to the system-under-scrutiny (SuS) and not to the monitor and is used to support interface-aware (IA) STL semantics.

The program then declares the quantitative IA-STL semantics used for the evaluation. The options are standard (StlSemantics::STANDARD), output-robustness (StlSemantics::OUT_ROBUSTNESS), input-vacuity (StlSemantics::IN_VACUITY),
input-robustness (StlSemantics::IN_ROBUSTNESS) and output-vacuity (StlSemantics::OUT_VACUITY). In this example, the program uses standard semantics. Explicit choice of the semantics is optional. By default, standard semantics is used.

Next, the program defines the default time unit to milliseconds (spec.default_unit(Unit::MS)). The default time unit is used to define time units of:

  • the input sample timestamps
  • the timing bounds of the temporal operators (unless explicitly using a different time unit)
  • the sampling period (unless explicitly using a different time unit)

Finally, the program defines the duration of the sampling period as well as its tolerance (spec.sampling_period(100, Unit::MS, 0.1)). The sampling period is defined to be 100ms with 10% tolerance. We recall that RTAMT-CPP implements a discrete time monitoring algorithm that assumes that consecutive samples have a perfect distance defined by the sampling period. This level of accuracy is often not possible, and the user allows defining a tolerance value (between 0 and 100% of the sampling period value) for the actual distance between two consecutive sample timestamps.

Resetting the monitoring state

RTAMT-CPP allows resetting the internal state of the monitor. After invoking reset(), the monitor assumes that the next update starts from the initial state of the monitor. We note that the reset only resets the internal state of the monitor, but not the specification. All the attributes of the specification (name, specification tex, variables and their types and I/O signatures, default unit and sampling time period) remain intact. The following program shows how to use the reset.

#include <rtamt/stl_specification.hpp>
#include <rtamt/stl_exception.hpp>

using namespace std;
using namespace rtamt;
using In = Input;

int main(int argc, char **argv) {
    StlSpecification spec;

    spec.name("Bounded-response Request-Grant");
    
    spec.declare_var("req", Type::FLOAT);
    spec.declare_var("gnt", Type::FLOAT);
    spec.declare_var("out", Type::FLOAT);
    
    spec.var_io_type("req", StlIOType::IN);
    spec.var_io_type("gnt", StlIOType::OUT);
    
    spec.default_unit(Unit::MS);
    spec.sampling_period(10, Unit::MS, 0.1);
    
    spec.semantics(StlSemantics::STANDARD);
    
    spec.spec("out = (req >= 3) -> (eventually[0:50ms](gnt >= 3))");
    
    spec.parse();
    
    double out;
    
    out = spec.update(0, {In("req", 0.0), In("gnt", 0.0)}); // out = inf
    out = spec.update(10, {In("req", 0.0), In("gnt", 0.0)}); // out = inf
    out = spec.update(20, {In("req", 0.0), In("gnt", 0.0)}); // out = inf
    out = spec.update(30, {In("req", 6.0), In("gnt", 0.0)}); // out = inf
    out = spec.update(40, {In("req", 6.0), In("gnt", 0.0)}); // out = inf
    out = spec.update(50, {In("req", 0.0), In("gnt", 0.0)}); // out = 3
    out = spec.update(60, {In("req", 0.0), In("gnt", 0.0)}); // out = 3

    spec.reset();

    out = spec.update(70, {In("req", 0.0), In("gnt", 6.0)}); // out = inf
    out = spec.update(80, {In("req", 0.0), In("gnt", 6.0)}); // out = inf
}

Working with time units and timing assumptions

The default unit in RTAMT is seconds, and the default expected period between two consecutive input samples is 1s with 10% tolerance. The following program uses these default values to implicitely set up the monitor. The specification intuitively states that whenever the req is above 3, eventually within 5s gnt also goes above 3. The user feeds the monitor with values timestamped exactly 1s apart from each other. It follows that the periodic sampling assumption holds.

RTAMT-CPP counts how many times the periodic sampling assumption has been violated up to the moment of being invoked via the sampling_violation_counter() function. In this example, this violation obviously occurs 0 times.

#include <rtamt/stl_specification.hpp>
#include <rtamt/stl_exception.hpp>

using namespace std;
using namespace rtamt;
using In = Input;

int main(int argc, char **argv) {
    StlSpecification spec;

    spec.name("Bounded-response Request-Grant");
    
    spec.declare_var("req", Type::FLOAT);
    spec.declare_var("gnt", Type::FLOAT);
    spec.declare_var("out", Type::FLOAT);
    
    spec.var_io_type("req", StlIOType::IN);
    spec.var_io_type("gnt", StlIOType::OUT);
    
    spec.semantics(StlSemantics::STANDARD);
    
    spec.spec("out = (req >= 3) -> (eventually[0:5](gnt >= 3))");
    
    spec.parse();
    
    double out;
    
    out = spec.update(0, {In("req", 0.0), In("gnt", 0.0)}); // out = inf
    out = spec.update(1, {In("req", 0.0), In("gnt", 0.0)}); // out = inf
    out = spec.update(2, {In("req", 0.0), In("gnt", 0.0)}); // out = inf
    out = spec.update(3, {In("req", 6.0), In("gnt", 0.0)}); // out = inf
    out = spec.update(4, {In("req", 6.0), In("gnt", 0.0)}); // out = inf
    out = spec.update(5, {In("req", 0.0), In("gnt", 0.0)}); // out = 3
    out = spec.update(6, {In("req", 0.0), In("gnt", 0.0)}); // out = 3

    double nb_violations = spec.sampling_violation_counter(); // nb_violations = 0
}

The same program, but with slightly different timestamps still reports 0 number of periodic sampling assumption violations. This is because the difference between all consecuting sampling timestamps remains within the (implicitely) specified 10% tolerance.

    ...
    out = spec.update(0, {In("req", 0.0), In("gnt", 0.0)}); // out = inf
    out = spec.update(1.01, {In("req", 0.0), In("gnt", 0.0)}); // out = inf
    out = spec.update(1.98, {In("req", 0.0), In("gnt", 0.0)}); // out = inf
    out = spec.update(3.03, {In("req", 6.0), In("gnt", 0.0)}); // out = inf
    out = spec.update(4.01, {In("req", 6.0), In("gnt", 0.0)}); // out = inf
    out = spec.update(4.99, {In("req", 0.0), In("gnt", 0.0)}); // out = 3
    out = spec.update(6.01, {In("req", 0.0), In("gnt", 0.0)}); // out = 3
    
    double nb_violations = spec.sampling_violation_counter(); // nb_violations = 0

On the other hand, the following sequence of inputs results in 1 reported violation of periodic sampling assumption. This is because the second input is 1.11s away from the first sample, which is 11% above the assumed 1s period.

    ...
    out = spec.update(0, {In("req", 0.0), In("gnt", 0.0)}); // out = inf
    out = spec.update(1.11, {In("req", 0.0), In("gnt", 0.0)}); // out = inf
    out = spec.update(2.08, {In("req", 0.0), In("gnt", 0.0)}); // out = inf
    out = spec.update(3.03, {In("req", 6.0), In("gnt", 0.0)}); // out = inf
    out = spec.update(4.01, {In("req", 6.0), In("gnt", 0.0)}); // out = inf
    out = spec.update(4.99, {In("req", 0.0), In("gnt", 0.0)}); // out = 3
    out = spec.update(6.01, {In("req", 0.0), In("gnt", 0.0)}); // out = 3
    
    double nb_violations = spec.sampling_violation_counter(); // nb_violations = 1

This same sequence of inputs results in 0 reported violation of periodic sampling assumption if we explicitely set the sampling period tolerance value to 20%.

    ...
    spec.sampling_period(1, Unit::S, 0.2);
    ...
    out = spec.update(0, {In("req", 0.0), In("gnt", 0.0)}); // out = inf
    out = spec.update(1.11, {In("req", 0.0), In("gnt", 0.0)}); // out = inf
    out = spec.update(2.08, {In("req", 0.0), In("gnt", 0.0)}); // out = inf
    out = spec.update(3.03, {In("req", 6.0), In("gnt", 0.0)}); // out = inf
    out = spec.update(4.01, {In("req", 6.0), In("gnt", 0.0)}); // out = inf
    out = spec.update(4.99, {In("req", 0.0), In("gnt", 0.0)}); // out = 3
    out = spec.update(6.01, {In("req", 0.0), In("gnt", 0.0)}); // out = 3
    
    double nb_violations = spec.sampling_violation_counter(); // nb_violations = 1

The user can also explicitely set the default unit, as well as the expected period and tolerance. In that case, the user must ensure that the timing bounds declared in the specification are divisible by the sampling period. The following specification is correct, since the sampling period is set to 500ms, the default unit is set to seconds, and the specification implicitely defines the bound from 0.5s = 500ms and 1.5s = 1500ms, i.e. between 1 amd 3 sampling periods.

#include <rtamt/stl_specification.hpp>
#include <rtamt/stl_exception.hpp>

using namespace std;
using namespace rtamt;
using In = Input;

int main(int argc, char **argv) {
    StlSpecification spec;

    spec.name("Bounded-response Request-Grant");
    
    spec.declare_var("req", Type::FLOAT);
    spec.declare_var("gnt", Type::FLOAT);
    spec.declare_var("out", Type::FLOAT);
    
    spec.var_io_type("req", StlIOType::IN);
    spec.var_io_type("gnt", StlIOType::OUT);
    
    spec.default_unit(Unit::S);
    spec.sampling_period(500, Unit::MS, 0.1);
    
    spec.semantics(StlSemantics::STANDARD);
    
    spec.spec("out = (req >= 3) -> (eventually[0.5:1.5](gnt >= 3))");
    
    spec.parse();
    
    double out;
    
    out = spec.update(0, {In("req", 0.0), In("gnt", 0.0)}); // out = inf
    out = spec.update(0.5, {In("req", 0.0), In("gnt", 0.0)}); // out = inf
    out = spec.update(1, {In("req", 0.0), In("gnt", 0.0)}); // out = inf
    out = spec.update(1.5, {In("req", 6.0), In("gnt", 0.0)}); // out = inf
    out = spec.update(2, {In("req", 6.0), In("gnt", 0.0)}); // out = inf
    out = spec.update(2.5, {In("req", 0.0), In("gnt", 0.0)}); // out = 3
    out = spec.update(3, {In("req", 0.0), In("gnt", 0.0)}); // out = 3

    double nb_violations = spec.sampling_violation_counter(); // nb_violations = 0
}

The following defines the same program, but now with ms as the default unit.

    ...
    spec.default_unit(Unit::MS);
    spec.sampling_period(500, Unit::MS, 0.1);
    ...
    spec.spec("out = (req >= 3) -> (eventually[500:1500](gnt >= 3))");
    
    spec.parse();
    
    double out;
    
    out = spec.update(0, {In("req", 0.0), In("gnt", 0.0)}); // out = inf
    out = spec.update(500, {In("req", 0.0), In("gnt", 0.0)}); // out = inf

    double nb_violations = spec.sampling_violation_counter(); // nb_violations = 0
}

The following program throws an exception - the temporal bound is defined between 500ms and 1500ms, while the sampling period equals to 1s = 1000ms.

    ...
    spec.default_unit(Unit::MS);
    spec.sampling_period(1, Unit::S, 0.1);
    ...
    spec.spec("out = (req >= 3) -> (eventually[500:1500](gnt >= 3))");
    ...
    spec.parse();
    ...
    
}

Finally, the following program is correct, because the temporal bound is explicitely defined between 500s and 1500s, while the sampling period equals to 1s.

    ...
    spec.default_unit(Unit::MS);
    spec.sampling_period(1, Unit::S, 0.1);
    ...
    spec.spec("out = (req >= 3) -> (eventually[500s:1500s](gnt >= 3))");
    ...
    spec.parse();
    ...
    
}

References

  • [1] Dejan Nickovic, Tomoya Yamaguchi: RTAMT: Online Robustness Monitors from STL. CoRR abs/2005.11827 (2020)
  • [2] Stefan Jaksic, Ezio Bartocci, Radu Grosu, Reinhard Kloibhofer, Thang Nguyen, Dejan Nickovic: From signal temporal logic to FPGA monitors. MEMOCODE 2015: 218-227
  • [3] Thomas Ferrère, Dejan Nickovic, Alexandre Donzé, Hisahiro Ito, James Kapinski: Interface-aware signal temporal logic. HSCC 2019: 57-66
  • [4] Thomas A. Henzinger, Zohar Manna, Amir Pnueli: What Good Are Digital Clocks? ICALP 1992: 545-558

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