J. Martins, J.M. Fonseca, R. Costa, J.C. Campos, A. Cunha, N. Macedo and J.N. Oliveira
Verification of Railway Network Models with EVEREST
In MODELS '22, pages 345-355. ACM. 2022.

Abstract

Models - at different levels of abstraction and pertaining to different engineering views - are central in the design of railway networks, in particular signalling systems. The design of such systems must follow numerous strict rules, which may vary from project to project and require information from different views. This renders manual verification of railway networks costly and error-prone. This paper presents EVEREST, a tool for automating the verification of railway network models that preserves the loosely coupled nature of the design process. To achieve this goal, EVEREST first combines two different views of a railway network model - the topology provided in signalling diagrams containing the functional infrastructure, and the precise coordinates of the elements provided in technical drawings (CAD) - in a unified model stored in the railML standard format. This railML model is then verified against a set of user-defined infrastructure rules, written in a custom modal logic that simplifies the specification of spatial constraints in the network. The violated rules can be visualized both in the signalling diagrams and technical drawings, where the element(s) responsible for the violation are highlighted. EVEREST is integrated in a long-term effort of EFACEC to implement industry-strong tools to automate and formally verify the design of railway solutions.

visit publisher  

@inproceedings{MartinsFCCCMO:2022,
 author = {J. Martins and J.M. Fonseca and R. Costa and J.C. Campos and A. Cunha and N. Macedo and J.N. Oliveira},
 title = {Verification of Railway Network Models with EVEREST},
 year = {2022},
 publisher = {ACM},
 doi = {10.1145/3550355.3552439},
 pages = {345-355},
 booktitle = {MODELS '22},
 abstract = {Models - at different levels of abstraction and pertaining to different engineering views - are central in the design of railway networks, in particular signalling systems. The design of such systems must follow numerous strict rules, which may vary from project to project and require information from different views. This renders manual verification of railway networks costly and error-prone. This paper presents EVEREST, a tool for automating the verification of railway network models that preserves the loosely coupled nature of the design process. To achieve this goal, EVEREST first combines two different views of a railway network model - the topology provided in signalling diagrams containing the functional infrastructure, and the precise coordinates of the elements provided in technical drawings (CAD) - in a unified model stored in the railML standard format. This railML model is then verified against a set of user-defined infrastructure rules, written in a custom modal logic that simplifies the specification of spatial constraints in the network. The violated rules can be visualized both in the signalling diagrams and technical drawings, where the element(s) responsible for the violation are highlighted. EVEREST is integrated in a long-term effort of EFACEC to implement industry-strong tools to automate and formally verify the design of railway solutions.}
}

Generated by mkBiblio 2.6.26