Trillium is a higher-order concurrent separation logic for proving trace refinements between programs and models. The logic is built using the Iris program logic framework and mechanized in the Coq proof assistant.
-
trillium/
: The Trillium program logic framework -
fairis/
: The Fairis instantiation of Trillium for reasoning about fair termination of concurrent programs.heap_lang/
: HeapLang instantiation with fuel modelexamples/
: Examples and case studies
-
external/
: External dependencies
The project maintains compatibility with Coq 8.17 and relies on coqc
being
available in your shell. Clone the external git submodule dependencies using
git submodule update --init --recursive
Alternatively, clone the repository using the --recurse-submodules
flag.
Run make -jN
to build the full development, where N
is the number of your
CPU cores.
Note that the compilation of the external dependencies is known to print a lot of warning messages when compiled with Coq 8.17.
This project uses git submodules to manage dependencies with other Coq
libraries. By default, when working with a repository that uses submodules, the
submodules will not be populated and updated automatically, and it is often
necessary to invoke git submodule update --init --recursive
or use the
--recurse-submodules
flag. However, this can be automated by setting the
submodule.recurse
setting to true
in your git config by running
git config --global submodule.recurse true
This will make git clone
, git checkout
, git pull
, etc. work as you would
expect and it should rarely be necessary to invoke any git submodule update
commands.
A git submodule is pinned to a particular commit of an external (remote) repository. If new commits have been pushed to the remote repository and you wish to integrate these in to the development, invoke
git submodule update --remote
to fetch the new commits and apply them to your local repository. This changes which commit your local submodule is pinned to. Remember to commit and push the submodule update to make it visible to other users of the repository.
Read more about git submodules in this tutorial.
A preprint is available describing Trillium, a program logic framework for both proving partial correctness properties and trace properties; Aneris is now an instantiation of the Trillium framework.