mcrl22lps(1) translate an mCRL2 specification to an LPS

SYNOPSIS

mcrl22lps [OPTION]... [INFILE [OUTFILE]]

DESCRIPTION

Linearises the mCRL2 specification in INFILE and writes the resulting LPS to OUTFILE. If OUTFILE is not present, stdout is used. If INFILE is not present, stdin is used.

OPTIONS

OPTION can be any of the following:
-b, --binary
when clustering use binary case functions instead of n-ary; in the presence of -w/--newstate, state variables are encoded by a vector of boolean variables
-e, --check-only
check syntax and static semantics; do not linearise
-c, --cluster
all actions in the final LPS are clustered. Clustering means that summands with the same action labels are grouped together. For instance, a(f1) . P(g1) + a(f2) . P(g2) is replaced by sum b: Bool . a(if(b, f1, f2)) . P(if(b, f2, g2)). The advantage is that the number of summands can be reduced subtantially in this way. The disadvantage is that sum operators are introduced and new data sorts with auxiliary functions are generated. In order to avoid the generation of new sorts, the option -b/--binary can be used.
-D, --delta
add a true->delta summands to each state in each process; these delta's subsume all other conditional timed delta's, effectively reducing the number of delta summands drastically in the resulting linear process; speeds up linearisation. This is the default, but it does not deal correctly with time.
-lNAME, --lin-method=NAME
use linearisation method NAME: 'regular' for generating an LPS in regular form (specification should be regular) (default) 'regular2' for a variant of 'regular' that uses more data variables (useful when 'regular' does not work) 'stack' for using stack data types (useful when 'regular' and 'regular2' do not work)
-w, --newstate
state variables are encoded using enumerated types instead of positive natural numbers (Pos). By using this option new finite sorts named Enumk are generated where k is the size of the domain. Also, auxiliary case functions and equalities are defined. In combination with the option --binary the finite sorts are encoded by booleans. (requires linearisation method 'regular' or 'regular2').
-z, --no-alpha
alphabet reductions are not applied. By default mcrl22lps attempts to distribute communication, hiding and allow operators over the parallel composition operator as this reduces the size of intermediate linear processes. By using this option, this step can be avoided. The name stems from the alphabet axioms in process algebra.
-n, --no-cluster
the actions in intermediate LPSs are not clustered before they are put in parallel. By default these processes are clustered to avoid a blow-up in the number of summands when transforming two parallel linear processes into a single linear process. If a linear process with M summands is put in parallel with a linear process with N summands the resulting process has M×N + M + N summands. Both M and N can be substantially reduced by clustering at the cost of introducing new sorts and functions. See -c/--cluster, esp. for a short explanation of the clustering process.
--no-constelm
do not try to apply constant elimination when generating a linear process.
-g, --no-deltaelm
avoid removing spurious delta summands. Due to the existence of time, delta summands cannot be omitted. Due to the presence of multi-actions the number of summands can be huge. The algorithm for removing delta summands simply works by comparing each delta summand with each other summand to see whether the condition of the one implies the condition of the other. Clearly, this has quadratic complexity, and can take a long time.
-f, --no-globvars
instantiate don't care values with arbitrary constants, instead of modelling them by global variables. This has no effecton global variables that are declared in the specification.
-o, --no-rewrite
do not rewrite data terms while linearising; useful when the rewrite system does not terminate. This option also switches off the application of constant elimination.
-m, --no-sumelm
avoid applying sum elimination in parallel composition
-QNUM, --qlimit=NUM
limit enumeration of quantifiers to NUM variables. (Default NUM=1000, NUM=0 for unlimited).
-rNAME, --rewriter=NAME
use rewrite strategy NAME: 'jitty' jitty rewriting (default) 'jittyc' compiled jitty rewriting 'jittyp' jitty rewriting with prover
-a, --statenames
the names of generated data parameters are extended with the name of the process in which they occur. This makes it easier to determine where the parameter comes from.
-T, --timed
Translate the process to linear form preserving all timed information. In parallel processes the number of possible time constraints can be large, slowing down linearisation. Confer the --delta option which yiels a much faster translation that does not preserve timing correctly
--timings[=FILE]
append timing measurements to FILE. Measurements are written to standard error if no FILE is provided
Standard options:
-q, --quiet
do not display warning messages
-v, --verbose
display short intermediate messages
-d, --debug
display detailed intermediate messages
--log-level=LEVEL
display intermediate messages up to and including level
-h, --help
display help information
--version
display version information

AUTHOR

Written by Jan Friso Groote.

REPORTING BUGS

Report bugs at <http://www.mcrl2.org/issuetracker>.

COPYRIGHT

Copyright © 2014 Technische Universiteit Eindhoven.
This is free software. You may redistribute copies of it under the terms of the Boost Software License <http://www.boost.org/LICENSE_1_0.txt>. There is NO WARRANTY, to the extent permitted by law.