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Cyber-Physical Systems I - Discrete Models

In this course we demonstrate how cyber-physical systems, in the wide range of their heterogeneous aspects (large-scale systems, system of systems, embedded systems, concurrent systems, hardware systems, software systems) can be modeled using the basic notion of transition systems. We consider relevant formalisms for modeling correctness properties of cyber-physical systems, and show how the models can be analyzed using algorithmic methods in order to prove correctness or find errors.


Course type Lecture
Instructors Prof. Dr. Andreas PodelskiDominik Klumpp, Elisabeth Henkel
Lecture

Wednesday 16:00 - 18:00, building 101, room SR 01-009/13
Lecture materials and recordings will be uploaded to ILIAS.

Exercise

Weekly exercise groups (in person) -- starting on October 17th/18th

Group 1: Monday, 16:00 - 18:00, SR 01-009/13, building 101 (Marcel)
Group 2: Monday, 14:00 - 16:00, SR 00-014, building 078 (Sanskar)
Group 3: Tuesday, 16:00 - 18:00, SR 00-007, building 106 (Sanskar)

Language of instruction English
Credits 6
Exams Written exam
Course catalog Cyber-Physical Systems -- Discrete Models - Lecture
Cyber-Physical Systems -- Discrete Models - Exercises
ILIAS course

Link
If you are registered on HisInOne but do not have access to this course, send an email to Dominik Klumpp (see above).

 

The lecture is planned as an in-person course.
Depending on the circumstances in the winter, we might have to change plans.

News

  • Oct 05: Note that the exercise sessions will start already on 17th and 18th October. The first lecture is on 19th October.
  • Oct 05: Homepage online.

Description

The course provides an introduction to discrete models of cyber-physical systems, their analysis and verification:

  • The students learn how to model cyber-physical systems as transition systems. Here, the main focus lies on software and hardware aspects of cyber-physical systems and on methods for modeling parallelism and communication.
  • Moreover, the students learn how to express properties about such systems. The course covers different mechanisms to specify temporal properties including linear time properties and branching time properties such as LTL, CTL, and CTL* properties.
  • Finally, the course demonstrates how to develop algorithms for checking whether these properties hold. After presenting algorithms for explicit state systems we introduce symbolic BDD-based algorithms which are able to tackle the well-known "state explosion problem". In addition, the course covers basic "Bounded Model Checking" (BMC) techniques which restrict the analysis to computation paths up to a certain length and reduce the verification problem to a Boolean satisfiability problem.

Lecture

There will be one (in-person) lecture each week, Wednesday 16:00 - 18:00.

We will upload the slides and lecture recordings in ILIAS.

Exercises

The lecture is accompanied by weekly exercises. Each Thursday we will publish an exercise sheet. Students will have time until the next Wednesday to prepare solutions for the problems stated on the exercise sheet. Solutions may be submitted alone or in groups of two. The solutions must be submitted by 23:59 on Wednesday via the lecture's ILIAS course. The tutors will mark the solutions and discuss them in the exercise groups the following week.

The exercises are not optional. You must obtain at least 50% of the exercise points. The idea is that you train yourself to write down things in a formally correct way. Your solutions to the exercises will help us to evaluate your knowledge and to evaluate your capability to solve the exercises in the exam.

The students present their solutions in the exercise group. This is done on a voluntary basis (you can choose which exercises you want to present), but every student must present his/her solution to an exercise in an exercise group at least once in the semester.

Exercise groups will meet in-person at the TF campus. You can find the times of the exercise groups in the table above. Please register for your exercise group in HisInOne.

The exercise sessions will NOT be recorded. No solution for the exercises will be uploaded. We encourage you to actively participate in the exercise sessions, as they are essential to practice and better understand the lecture content.

Exam

There will be a written exam. Further details will be announced later.

You may bring one DIN A4 sheet to the exam. Both sides of this sheet may be filled with any notes (e.g., definitions, theorems, examples) but the notes have to be handwritten. You must not use any other material in the exam (except for writing utensils).

Resources 

Slides

The lecture slides will be uploaded to the lecture's ILIAS course.

Exercise Sheets

The weekly exercise sheets will be uploaded to the lecture's ILIAS course. You can submit your solution via ILIAS (within your respective exercise group).

Exercise SheetSubmit by:
Exercise Sheet 01 Wednesday, 26th October 2022
Exercise Sheet 02 Wednesday, 2nd November 2022
Exercise Sheet 03 Wednesday, 9th November 2022
Exercise Sheet 04 Wednesday, 16th November 2022
Exercise Sheet 05 Wednesday, 23rd November 2022
Exercise Sheet 06 Wednesday, 30th November 2022
Exercise Sheet 07 Wednesday, 7th December 2022
Exercise Sheet 08 Wednesday, 14th December 2022
Exercise Sheet 09 Wednesday, 21st December 2022
Exercise Sheet 10 Wednesday, 11th January 2023
Exercise Sheet 11 Wednesday, 18th January 2023
Exercise Sheet 12 Wednesday, 25th January 2023
Exercise Sheet 13 Wednesday, 1st February 2023

Old lectures

You can find information on previous courses on the following web pages.

Literature

The lecture will follow very closely the famous textbook "Principles of Model Checking" by Christel Baier and Joost-Pieter Katoen (MIT Press).  A copy is available in the library.