Unit 4 ST
Unit 4 ST
BRIEF
OVERVIEW PATHS, PATH PRODUCTS AND REGULAR EXPRESSIONS
UNIT I This unit gives an indepth overview of Paths of various flow graphs, their interpretations and application.
Purpose of At the end of this unit, the student will be able to:
Testing
Dichotomies Interpret the control flowgraph and identify the path products, path sums and path expressions.
Model for Identify how the mathematical laws (distributive, associative, commutative etc) holds for the paths.
Testing Apply reduction procedure algorithm to a control flowgraph and simplify it into a single path expression.
Consequences
Find the all possible paths (Max. Path Count) of a given flow graph.
of Bugs
Find the minimum paths required to cover a given flow graph.
Taxonomy of
Calculate the probability of paths and understand the need for finding the probabilities.
Bugs
Differentiate betweeen Structured and Un-structured flowgraphs.
Summary
Calculate the mean processing time of a routine of a given flowgraph.
UNIT II Understand how complimentary operations such as PUSH / POP or GET / RETURN are interpreted in a
flowgraph.
Basics of Path Identify the limitations of the above approaches.
Testing Understand the problems due to flow-anomalies and identify whether anomalies exist in the given path
Predicates, Path expression.
Predicates and
Achievable
Paths
Path Sensitizing PATH PRODUCTS AND PATH EXPRESSION:
Path
Instrumentation TOP
Application of
Path Testing
MOTIVATION:
Summary Flow graphs are being an abstract representation of programs.
Any question about a program can be cast into an equivalent question about an appropriate
UNIT III
flowgraph.
Transaction
Most software development, testing and debugging tools use flow graphs analysis techniques.
Flows PATH PRODUCTS:
Transaction Normally flow graphs used to denote only control flow connectivity.
Flow Testing The simplest weight we can give to a link is a name.
Techniques Using link names as weights, we then convert the graphical flow graph into an equivalent
Implementation algebraic like expressions which denotes the set of all possible paths from entry to exit for the
Basics of Data
flow graph.
Flow Testing Every link of a graph can be given a name.
Strategies in The link name will be denoted by lower case italic letters.
Data Flow In tracing a path or path segment through a flow graph, you traverse a succession of link names.
Testing The name of the path or path segment that corresponds to those links is expressed naturally by
Application of concatenating those link names.
Data Flow For example, if you traverse links a,b,c and d along some path, the name for that path segment
Testing is abcd. This path name is also called a path product. Figure 5.1 shows some examples:
Summary
UNIT IV
Domains and
Paths
Nice and Ugly
domains
Domain Testing
Domain and
Interface
Testing
Domains and
Testability
Summary
UNIT V
Path products
and Path
expression
Reduction
Procedure
Applications
Regular
Expressions
and Flow
Anomaly
Detection
Summary
UNIT VI
Logic Based
Testing
Decision Tables
Path
Expressions
KV Charts Figure 5.1: Examples of paths.
Specifications
Summary
PATH EXPRESSION:
Consider a pair of nodes in a graph and the set of paths between those node.
Denote that set of paths by Upper case letter such as X,Y. From Figure 5.1c, the members of the
path set can be listed as follows:
ac+abc+abbc+abbbc+abbbbc+...........
The + sign is understood to mean "or" between the two nodes of interest, paths ac, or abc, or
abbc, and so on can be taken.
Any expression that consists of path names and "OR"s and which denotes a set of paths
between two nodes is called a "Path Expression.".
PATH PRODUCTS:
The name of a path that consists of two successive path segments is conveniently expressed by
the concatenation or Path Product of the segment names.
For example, if X and Y are defined as X=abcde,Y=fghij,then the path corresponding to X
followed by Y is denoted by
XY=abcdefghij
Similarly,
YX=fghijabcde
aX=aabcde
Xa=abcdea
XaX=abcdeaabcde
If X and Y represent sets of paths or path expressions, their product represents the set of paths
that can be obtained by following every element of X by any element of Y in all possible ways.
For example,
Then,
XY = abcuvw + defuvw + ghiuvw + abcz + defz + ghiz
If a link or segment name is repeated, that fact is denoted by an exponent. The exponent's value
denotes the number of repetitions:
X = abcde
then
X1 = abcde
X2 = abcdeabcde = (abcde)2
X3 = abcdeabcdeabcde = (abcde)2abcde
= abcde(abcde)2 = (abcde)3
RULE 1: A(BC)=(AB)C=ABC
where A,B,C are path names, set of path names or path expressions.
The zeroth power of a link name, path product, or path expression is also needed for
completeness. It is denoted by the numeral "1" and denotes the "path" whose length is zero - that
is, the path that doesn't have any links.
a0 = 1
X0 = 1
PATH SUMS:
The "+" sign was used to denote the fact that path names were part of the same set of paths.
The "PATH SUM" denotes paths in parallel between nodes.
Links a and b in Figure 5.1a are parallel paths and are denoted by a + b. Similarly, links c and d
are parallel paths between the next two nodes and are denoted by c + d.
The set of all paths between nodes 1 and 2 can be thought of as a set of parallel paths and
denoted by eacf+eadf+ebcf+ebdf.
If X and Y are sets of paths that lie between the same pair of nodes, then X+Y denotes the
UNION of those set of paths. For example, in Figure 5.2:
The first set of parallel paths is denoted by X + Y + d and the second set by U + V + W + h + i + j.
The set of all paths in this flowgraph is f(X + Y + d)g(U + V + W + h + i + j)k
The path is a set union operation, it is clearly Commutative and Associative.
RULE 2: X+Y=Y+X
RULE 3: (X+Y)+Z=X+(Y+Z)=X+Y+Z
DISTRIBUTIVE LAWS:
The product and sum operations are distributive, and the ordinary rules of multiplication apply;
that is
ABSORPTION RULE:
If X and Y denote the same set of paths, then the union of these sets is unchanged;
consequently,
If a set consists of paths names and a member of that set is added to it, the "new" name, which
is already in that set of names, contributes nothing and can be ignored.
For example,
if X=a+aa+abc+abcd+def then
X+a = X+aa = X+abc = X+abcd = X+def = X
It follows that any arbitrary sum of identical path expressions reduces to the same path
expression.
LOOPS:
Loops can be understood as an infinite set of parallel paths. Say that the loop consists of a single
link b. then the set of all paths through that loop point is b0+b1+b2+b3+b4+b5+..............
This potentially infinite sum is denoted by b* for an individual link and by X* when X is a path
expression.
The path expression for the above figure is denoted by the notation:
ab*c=ac+abc+abbc+abbbc+................
Evidently,
It is more convenient to denote the fact that a loop cannot be taken more than a certain, say n,
number of times.
A bar is used under the exponent to denote the fact as follows:
Xn = X0+X1+X2+X3+X4+X5+..................+Xn
RULES 6 - 16:
The following rules can be derived from the previous rules:
RULE 6: Xn + Xm = Xn if n>m
RULE 6: Xn + Xm = Xm if m>n
RULE 11: 1 + 1 = 1
RULE 12: 1X = X1 = X
Following or preceding a set of paths by a path of zero length does not change the set.
RULE 13: 1n = 1n = 1* = 1+ = 1
No matter how often you traverse a path of zero length,It is a path of zero length.
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REDUCTION PROCEDURE:
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(a + b)(c + d + e) = ac + ad + + ae + bc + bd + be
In the first way, we remove the self-loop and then multiply all outgoing links by Z*.
In the second way, we split the node into two equivalent nodes, call them A and A' and put in a
link between them whose path expression is Z*. Then we remove node A' using steps 4 and 5 to
yield outgoing links whose path expressions are Z*X and Z*Y.
A REDUCTION PROCEDURE - EXAMPLE:
Let us see by applying this algorithm to the following graph where we remove several nodes in
order; that is
Removing the loop and then node 6 result in the following expression:
a(bgjf)*b(c+gkh)d((ilhd)*imf(bjgf)*b(c+gkh)d)*(ilhd)*e
You can practice by applying the algorithm on the following flowgraphs and generate their
respective path expressions:
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APPLICATIONS:
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APPLICATIONS:
The purpose of the node removal algorithm is to present one very generalized concept- the path
expression and way of getting it.
Every application follows this common pattern:
1. Convert the program or graph into a path expression.
2. Identify a property of interest and derive an appropriate set of "arithmetic" rules that
characterizes the property.
3. Replace the link names by the link weights for the property of interest. The path
expression has now been converted to an expression in some algebra, such as
ordinary algebra, regular expressions, or boolean algebra. This algebraic expression
summarizes the property of interest over the set of all paths.
4. Simplify or evaluate the resulting "algebraic" expression to answer the question you
asked.
HOW MANY PATHS IN A FLOWGRAPH ?
The question is not simple. Here are some ways you could ask it:
1. What is the maximum number of different paths possible?
2. What is the fewest number of paths possible?
3. How many different paths are there really?
4. What is the average number of paths?
Determining the actual number of different paths is an inherently difficult problem because there
could be unachievable paths resulting from correlated and dependent predicates.
If we know both of these numbers (maximum and minimum number of possible paths) we have a
good idea of how complete our testing is.
Asking for "the average number of paths" is meaningless.
MAXIMUM PATH COUNT ARITHMETIC:
Label each link with a link weight that corresponds to the number of paths that link represents.
Also mark each loop with the maximum number of times that loop can be taken. If the answer is
infinite, you might as well stop the analysis because it is clear that the maximum number of paths
will be infinite.
There are three cases of interest: parallel links, serial links, and loops.
This arithmetic is an ordinary algebra. The weight is the number of paths in each set.
EXAMPLE:
The following is a reasonably well-structured program.
Each link represents a single link and consequently is given a weight of "1" to start.
Lets say the outer loop will be taken exactly four times and inner Loop Can be taken
zero or three times Its path expression, with a little work, is:
A: The flow graph should be annotated by replacing the link name with the maximum
of paths through that link (1) and also note the number of times for looping.
B: Combine the first pair of parallel loops outside the loop and also the pair in the
outer loop.
C: Multiply the things out and remove nodes to clear the clutter.
For the Inner Loop:
D:Calculate the total weight of inner loop, which can execute a min. of 0 times and
max. of 3 times. So, it inner loop can be evaluated as follows:
1 3 = 10 + 11 + 12 + 13 = 1 + 1 + 1 + 1 = 4
2 X 84 X 2 = 32,768.
Alternatively, you could have substituted a "1" for each link in the path expression and then
simplified, as follows:
a(b+c)d{e(fi)*fgj(m+l)k}*e(fi)*fgh
= 1(1 + 1)1(1(1 x 1)31 x 1 x 1(1 + 1)1)41(1 x 1)31 x 1 x 1
= 2(131 x (2))413
= 2(4 x 2)4 x 4
= 2 x 84 x 4 = 32,768
The node-by-node reduction procedure can also be used as a test for structured code.
Flow graphs that DO NOT contain one or more of the graphs shown below (Figure 5.8) as
subgraphs are structured.
1. Jumping into loops
2. Jumping out of loops
3. Branching into decisions
4. Branching out of decisions
Figure 5.8: Un-structured sub-graphs.
The values of the weights are the number of members in a set of paths.
EXAMPLE:
Applying the arithmetic to the earlier example gives us the identical steps unitl step 3
(C) as below:
From Step 4, the it would be different from the previous example:
If you observe the original graph, it takes at least two paths to cover and that it can be
done in two paths.
If you have fewer paths in your test plan than this minimum you probably haven't
covered. It's another check.
CALCULATING THE PROBABILITY:
Path selection should be biased toward the low - rather than the high-probability paths.
This raises an interesting question:
This question can be answered under suitable assumptions, primarily that all probabilities
involved are independent, which is to say that all decisions are independent and uncorrelated.
We use the same algorithm as before : node-by-node removal of uninteresting nodes.
Weights, Notations and Arithmetic:
Probabilities can come into the act only at decisions (including decisions associated
with loops).
Annotate each outlink with a weight equal to the probability of going in that direction.
Evidently, the sum of the outlink probabilities must equal 1
For a simple loop, if the loop will be taken a mean of N times, the looping probability is
N/(N + 1) and the probability of not looping is 1/(N + 1).
A link that is not part of a decision node has a probability of 1.
The arithmetic rules are those of ordinary arithmetic.
In this table, in case of a loop, PA is the probability of the link leaving the loop and PL
is the probability of looping.
The rules are those of ordinary probability theory.
1. If you can do something either from column A with a probability of PA or
from column B with a probability PB, then the probability that you do either is
PA + P B .
2. For the series case, if you must do both things, and their probabilities are
independent (as assumed), then the probability that you do both is the
product of their probabilities.
For example, a loop node has a looping probability of PL and a probability of not
looping of PA, which is obviously equal to I - PL.
Following the above rule, all we've done is replace the outgoing probability with 1 - so
why the complicated rule? After a few steps in which you've removed nodes, combined
parallel terms, removed loops and the like, you might find something like this:
which is what we've postulated for any decision. In other words, division by 1 - PL
renormalizes the outlink probabilities so that their sum equals unity after the loop is
removed.
EXAMPLE:
Here is a complicated bit of logic. We want to know the probability associated with
cases A, B, and C.
Let us do this in three parts, starting with case A. Note that the sum of the probabilities
at each decision node is equal to 1. Start by throwing away anything that isn't on the
way to case A, and then apply the reduction procedure. To avoid clutter, we usually
leave out probabilities equal to 1.
CASE A:
Case B is simpler:
Case C is similar and should yield a probability of 1 - 0.125 - 0.158 = 0.717:
This checks. It's a good idea when doing this sort of thing to calculate all the
probabilities and to verify that the sum of the routine's exit probabilities does equal 1.
If it doesn't, then you've made calculation error or, more likely, you've left out some
branching probability.
How about path probabilities? That's easy. Just trace the path of interest and multiply
the probabilities as you go.
Alternatively, write down the path name and do the indicated arithmetic operation.
Say that a path consisted of links a, b, c, d, e, and the associated probabilities were .2,
.5, 1., .01, and I respectively. Path abcbcbcdeabddea would have a probability of 5 x
10-10.
Long paths are usually improbable.
MEAN PROCESSING TIME OF A ROUTINE:
Given the execution time of all statements or instructions for every link in a flowgraph and the
probability for each direction for all decisions are to find the mean processing time for the routine
as a whole.
The model has two weights associated with every link: the processing time for that link, denoted
by T, and the probability of that link P.
The arithmetic rules for calculating the mean time:
EXAMPLE:
1. Start with the original flow graph annotated with probabilities and processing time.
2. Combine the parallel links of the outer loop. The result is just the mean of the
processing times for the links because there aren't any other links leaving the first
node. Also combine the pair of links at the beginning of the flowgraph..
4. Use the cross-term step to eliminate a node and to create the inner self - loop.
5. Finally, you can get the mean processing time, by using the arithmetic rules as follows:
PUSH/POP, GET/RETURN:
This model can be used to answer several different questions that can turn up in debugging.
It can also help decide which test cases to design.
The question is:
Given a pair of complementary operations such as PUSH (the stack) and POP (the stack),
considering the set of all possible paths through the routine, what is the net effect of the
routine? PUSH or POP? How many times? Under what conditions?
Here are some other examples of complementary operations to which this model applies:
The numeral 1 is used to indicate that nothing of interest (neither PUSH nor POP)
occurs on a given link.
"H" denotes PUSH and "P" denotes POP. The operations are commutative,
associative, and distributive.
Below Table 5.9 shows several combinations of values for the two looping terms - M1
is the number of times the inner loop will be taken and M2 the number of times the
outer loop will be taken.
These expressions state that the stack will be popped only if the inner loop is not
taken.
The stack will be left alone only if the inner loop is iterated once, but it may also be
pushed.
For all other values of the inner loop, the stack will only be pushed.
EXAMPLE 2 (GET / RETURN):
Exactly the same arithmetic tables used for previous example are used for GET /
RETURN a buffer block or resource, or, in fact, for any pair of complementary
operations in which the total number of operations in either direction is cumulative.
The arithmetic tables for GET/RETURN are:
G(G + R)G(GR)*GGR*R
= G(G + R)G3R*R
= (G + R)G3R*
= (G4 + G2)R*
This expression specifies the conditions under which the resources will be balanced
on leaving the routine.
If the upper branch is taken at the first decision, the second loop must be taken four
times.
If the lower branch is taken at the first decision, the second loop must be taken twice.
For any other values, the routine will not balance. Therefore, the first loop does not
have to be instrumented to verify this behavior because its impact should be nil.
LIMITATIONS AND SOLUTIONS:
The main limitation to these applications is the problem of unachievable paths.
The node-by-node reduction procedure, and most graph-theory-based algorithms work well when
all paths are possible, but may provide misleading results when some paths are unachievable.
The approach to handling unachievable paths (for any application) is to partition the graph into
subgraphs so that all paths in each of the subgraphs are achievable.
The resulting subgraphs may overlap, because one path may be common to several different
subgraphs.
Each predicate's truth-functional value potentially splits the graph into two subgraphs. For n
predicates, there could be as many as 2n subgraphs.
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THE PROBLEM:
The generic flow-anomaly detection problem (note: not just data-flow anomalies, but any flow
anomaly) is that of looking for a specific sequence of options considering all possible paths
through a routine.
Let the operations be SET and RESET, denoted by s and r respectively, and we want to know if
there is a SET followed immediately a SET or a RESET followed immediately by a RESET (an ss
or an rr sequence).
Some more application examples:
1. A file can be opened (o), closed (c), read (r), or written (w). If the file is read or written
to after it's been closed, the sequence is nonsensical. Therefore, cr and cw are
anomalous. Similarly, if the file is read before it's been written, just after opening, we
may have a bug. Therefore, or is also anomalous. Furthermore, oo and cc, though not
actual bugs, are a waste of time and therefore should also be examined.
2. A tape transport can do a rewind (d), fast-forward (f), read (r), write (w), stop (p), and
skip (k). There are rules concerning the use of the transport; for example, you cannot
go from rewind to fast-forward without an intervening stop or from rewind or fast-
forward to read or write without an intervening stop. The following sequences are
anomalous: df, dr, dw, fd, and fr. Does the flowgraph lead to anomalous sequences on
any path? If so, what sequences and under what circumstances?
3. The data-flow anomalies discussed in Unit 4 requires us to detect the dd, dk, kk, and
ku sequences. Are there paths with anomalous data flows?
THE METHOD:
Annotate each link in the graph with the appropriate operator or the null operator 1.
Simplify things to the extent possible, using the fact that a + a = a and 12 = 1.
You now have a regular expression that denotes all the possible sequences of operators in that
graph. You can now examine that regular expression for the sequences of interest.
EXAMPLE: Let A, B, C, be nonempty sets of character sequences whose smallest string is at
least one character long. Let T be a two-character string of characters. Then if T is a substring of
(i.e., if T appears within) ABnC, then T will appear in AB2C. (HUANG's Theorem)
As an example, let
A = pp
B = srr
C = rp
T = ss
A = p + pp + ps
B = psr + ps(r + ps)
C = rp
T = P4
Is it obvious that there is a p4 sequence in ABnC? The theorem states that we have only to look
at
Multiplying out the expression and simplifying shows that there is no p4 sequence.
Incidentally, the above observation is an informal proof of the wisdom of looping twice discussed
in Unit 2. Because data-flow anomalies are represented by two-character sequences, it follows
the above theorem that looping twice is what you need to do to find such anomalies.
LIMITATIONS:
Huang's theorem can be easily generalized to cover sequences of greater length than two
characters. Beyond three characters, though, things get complex and this method has probably
reached its utilitarian limit for manual application.
There are some nice theorems for finding sequences that occur at the beginnings and ends of
strings but no nice algorithms for finding strings buried in an expression.
Static flow analysis methods can't determine whether a path is or is not achievable. Unless the
flow analysis includes symbolic execution or similar techniques, the impact of unachievable paths
will not be included in the analysis.
The flow-anomaly application, for example, doesn't tell us that there will be a flow anomaly - it
tells us that if the path is achievable, then there will be a flow anomaly. Such analytical problems
go away, of course, if you take the trouble to design routines for which all paths are achievable.
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SUMMARY:
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A flowgraph annotated with link names for every link can be converted into a path expression that
represents the set of all paths in that flowgraph. A node-by-node reduction procedure is used.
By substituting link weights for all links, and using the appropriate arithmetic rules, the path expression is
converted into an algebraic expression that can be used to determine the minimum and maximum number
of possible paths in a flowgraph, the probability that a given node will be reached, the mean processing
time of a routine, and other models.
With different, suitable arithmetic rules, and by using complementary operators as weights for the links, the
path expression can be converted into an expression that denotes, over the set of all possible paths, what
the net effect of the routine is.
With links annotated with the appropriate weights, the path expression is converted into a regular
expression that denotes the set of all operator sequences over the set of all paths in a routine. Rules for
determining whether a given sequence of operations are possible are given. In other words, we have a
generalized flow-anomaly detection method that'll work for data-flow anomalies or any other flow anomaly.
All flow analysis methods lose accuracy and utility if there are unachievable paths. Expand the accuracy
and utility of your analytical tools by designs for which all paths are achievable. Such designs are always
possible.
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