Integer Transition Systems
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Jump to navigationJump to searchThe Integer Transition Systems category is concerned with the question "Will every possible sequence of rewrite steps on an integer program terminate?".
Syntax & Semantic
Integer Transition Systems (ITSs) are LCTRSs with the following restrictions:
- The theory is always Ints.
- Rules must comply with the following grammar:
rule ::= (rule lhs rhs (:guard term)? (:var (vars))?) lhs ::= (identifier identifier+) rhs ::= (identifier term+)
Moreover, ITSs must declare one and only one entrypoint
entrypoint ::= (entrypoint identifier)
where the given identifier refers to a previously declared function symbol.
The goal is to prove termination w.r.t. all well-sorted startterms of the form
(f c_1 ... c_k)
where f is the entrypoint and c_1,...,c_k are constants from the theory Ints (i.e., integers or Booleans).
Problem
Input: An ITS R.
Question: Does R terminate?
Possible Outputs:
- "YES" followed by a termination proof, e.g., a ranking function proving termination of R.
- "NO" followed by a nontermination proof, e.g., a loop that indicates an infinite rewrite sequence of R.
- "MAYBE" (indicating that the solver cannot prove termination of R).