On-the-fly solving for symbolic parity games
International Conference on Tools and Algorithms for the Construction and …, 2022•Springer
Parity games can be used to represent many different kinds of decision problems. In
practice, tools that use parity games often rely on a specification in a higher-order logic from
which the actual game can be obtained by means of an exploration. For many of these
decision problems we are only interested in the solution for a designated vertex in the game.
We formalise how to use on-the-fly solving techniques during the exploration process, and
show that this can help to decide the winner of such a designated vertex in an incomplete …
practice, tools that use parity games often rely on a specification in a higher-order logic from
which the actual game can be obtained by means of an exploration. For many of these
decision problems we are only interested in the solution for a designated vertex in the game.
We formalise how to use on-the-fly solving techniques during the exploration process, and
show that this can help to decide the winner of such a designated vertex in an incomplete …
Abstract
Parity games can be used to represent many different kinds of decision problems. In practice, tools that use parity games often rely on a specification in a higher-order logic from which the actual game can be obtained by means of an exploration. For many of these decision problems we are only interested in the solution for a designated vertex in the game. We formalise how to use on-the-fly solving techniques during the exploration process, and show that this can help to decide the winner of such a designated vertex in an incomplete game. Furthermore, we define partial solving techniques for incomplete parity games and show how these can be made resilient to work directly on the incomplete game, rather than on a set of safe vertices. We implement our techniques for symbolic parity games and study their effectiveness in practice, showing that speed-ups of several orders of magnitude are feasible and overhead (if unavoidable) is typically low.
Springer
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