awesome-rust-formalized-reasoning VS crucible

Compare awesome-rust-formalized-reasoning vs crucible and see what are their differences.

awesome-rust-formalized-reasoning

An exhaustive list of all Rust resources regarding automated or semi-automated formalization efforts in any area, constructive mathematics, formal algorithms, and program verification. (by newca12)

crucible

Crucible is a library for symbolic simulation of imperative programs (by GaloisInc)
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awesome-rust-formalized-reasoning crucible
3 2
263 593
- 1.7%
7.7 9.4
5 days ago 19 days ago
Rust
MIT License -
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awesome-rust-formalized-reasoning

Posts with mentions or reviews of awesome-rust-formalized-reasoning. We have used some of these posts to build our list of alternatives and similar projects. The last one was on 2022-06-17.

crucible

Posts with mentions or reviews of crucible. We have used some of these posts to build our list of alternatives and similar projects. The last one was on 2022-03-23.
  • Kani Rust Verifier – a bit-precise model-checker for Rust
    7 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 23 Mar 2022
    Nice, I just would have liked to get all these different verification tools combined under the same interface, just being different backends as drafted by the rust verification tools work of project oak: have "cargo verify" as common command and use common test annotations, allowing the same test to be verified with different backends or just fuzzed/proptested.

    The model checking approach seems to be a bit limited regarding loops. There are also abstract interpreters, such as https://github.com/facebookexperimental/MIRAI, and symbolic executers, such as https://github.com/dwrensha/seer or https://github.com/GaloisInc/crucible.

    Overall I believe this space would benefit from more coordination and focus on developing something that has the theoretical foundations to cover as many needs as possible and then make a user-friendly tool out of it that is endorsed by the Rust project similar to how Rust analyzer is the one language server to come.

  • Type Theory Forall Podcast #13 - C/C++, Emacs, Haskell, and Coq. The Journey (John Wiegley)
    3 projects | /r/ProgrammingLanguages | 23 Dec 2021
    When we talk about formal methods being used in the industry I honestly think Galois' approach is the future. The main idea is to symbolically execute llvm code and run a SAT solver on the desired properties. See Crucible and SAW.

What are some alternatives?

When comparing awesome-rust-formalized-reasoning and crucible you can also consider the following projects:

kani - Kani Rust Verifier

saw-script - The SAW scripting language.

Kind - A next-gen functional language [Moved to: https://github.com/Kindelia/Kind2]

MIRAI - Rust mid-level IR Abstract Interpreter

cicada - Cicada Language

seer - symbolic execution engine for Rust

Formality - A modern proof language [Moved to: https://github.com/kind-lang/Kind]

opennars - OpenNARS for Research 3.0+

rmc - Kani Rust Verifier [Moved to: https://github.com/model-checking/kani]

minisat - Minisat Haskell bundle

silveroak - Formal specification and verification of hardware, especially for security and privacy.