----------------------------------------------------------------------------- -- | -- Module : Documentation.SBV.Examples.ProofTools.Fibonacci -- Copyright : (c) Levent Erkok -- License : BSD3 -- Maintainer: erkokl@gmail.com -- Stability : experimental -- -- Example inductive proof to show partial correctness of the for-loop -- based fibonacci algorithm: -- -- @ -- i = 0 -- k = 1 -- m = 0 -- while i < n: -- m, k = k, m + k -- i++ -- @ -- -- We do the proof against an axiomatized fibonacci implementation using an -- uninterpreted function. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- {-# LANGUAGE DeriveAnyClass #-} {-# LANGUAGE DeriveFoldable #-} {-# LANGUAGE DeriveGeneric #-} {-# LANGUAGE DeriveTraversable #-} {-# LANGUAGE FlexibleInstances #-} {-# LANGUAGE MultiParamTypeClasses #-} {-# LANGUAGE NamedFieldPuns #-} module Documentation.SBV.Examples.ProofTools.Fibonacci where import Data.SBV import Data.SBV.Tools.Induction import Data.SBV.Control import GHC.Generics hiding (S) -- * System state -- | System state. We simply have two components, parameterized -- over the type so we can put in both concrete and symbolic values. data S a = S { i :: a, k :: a, m :: a, n :: a } deriving (Show, Mergeable, Generic, Functor, Foldable, Traversable) -- | 'Fresh' instance for our state instance Fresh IO (S SInteger) where fresh = S <$> freshVar_ <*> freshVar_ <*> freshVar_ <*> freshVar_ -- | Encoding partial correctness of the sum algorithm. We have: -- -- >>> fibCorrect -- Q.E.D. -- -- NB. In my experiments, I found that this proof is quite fragile due -- to the use of quantifiers: If you make a mistake in your algorithm -- or the coding, z3 pretty much spins forever without finding a counter-example. -- However, with the correct coding, the proof is almost instantaneous! fibCorrect :: IO (InductionResult (S Integer)) fibCorrect = induct chatty setup initial trans strengthenings inv goal where -- Set this to True for SBV to print steps as it proceeds -- through the inductive proof chatty :: Bool chatty = False -- Declare fib as un uninterpreted function: fib :: SInteger -> SInteger fib = uninterpret "fib" -- We setup to axiomatize the textbook definition of fib in SMT-Lib setup :: Symbolic () setup = do constrain $ fib 0 .== 0 constrain $ fib 1 .== 1 -- This is unfortunate; but SBV currently does not support -- adding quantified constraints in the query mode. So we -- have to write this axiom in SMT-Lib. Note also how carefully -- we've chosen this axiom to work with our proof! addAxiom "fib_n" [ "(assert (forall ((x Int))" , " (= (fib (+ x 2)) (+ (fib (+ x 1)) (fib x)))))" ] -- Initialize variables initial :: S SInteger -> SBool initial S{i, k, m, n} = i .== 0 .&& k .== 1 .&& m .== 0 .&& n .>= 0 -- We code the algorithm almost literally in SBV notation: trans :: S SInteger -> [S SInteger] trans st@S{i, k, m, n} = [ite (i .< n) st { i = i + 1, k = m + k, m = k } st ] -- No strengthenings needed for this problem! strengthenings :: [(String, S SInteger -> SBool)] strengthenings = [] -- Loop invariant: @i@ remains at most @n@, @k@ is @fib (i+1)@ -- and @m@ is fib(i)@: inv :: S SInteger -> SBool inv S{i, k, m, n} = i .<= n .&& k .== fib (i+1) .&& m .== fib i -- Final goal. When the termination condition holds, the value @m@ -- holds the @n@th fibonacc number. Note that SBV does not prove the -- termination condition; it simply is the indication that the loop -- has ended as specified by the user. goal :: S SInteger -> (SBool, SBool) goal S{i, m, n} = (i .== n, m .== fib n)