Copilot is a runtime verification framework for hard real-time systems. Programs can be interpreted for testing, or translated into C99 code to be incorporated in a project or standalone application. The C99 code generated is constant in memory and time, making it suitable for systems with hard real-time requirements.
Installation • Examples • Related projects • Documentation • Contributions • Acknowledgements
-
Write simple, high-level specifications using a stream-based language.
-
Produce hard real-time C99 runtime monitors that run in constant memory and time.
-
Catch errors in specifications early using expressive static type system.
-
Prove properties about specifications using theorem proving extensions.
-
Interpret specifications for testing and debugging purposes.
-
Obtain proofs of correctness of the generated code.
On Debian Bookworm / Ubuntu 23.04 or newer, Copilot can be installed directly from the package repositories with:
$ sudo apt-get install libghc-copilot-dev
To test that Copilot is available, execute the following:
$ ghci <<< 'import Language.Copilot'
It should end with a line like the following and not print any error messages:
ghci> ghci> Leaving GHCi.
On Fedora 40 or newer, Copilot can be installed directly from the package repositories with:
$ sudo dnf install ghc-copilot-devel
To test that Copilot is available, execute the following:
$ ghci <<< 'import Language.Copilot'
It should end with a line like the following and not print any error messages:
ghci> ghci> Leaving GHCi.
On other Linux distributions or older Debian-based distributions, to use
Copilot you must install a Haskell compiler (GHC) and the package manager
Cabal. We currently support all versions of GHC from 8.6.5 to modern versions
(9.8 as of this writing). You can install the toolchain using
ghcup or, if you are on Debian/Ubuntu,
directly with apt-get
:
$ sudo apt-get install ghc cabal-install
Once the compiler is installed, install Copilot from Hackage with:
cabal v2-install --lib copilot
To test that Copilot is available, execute the following:
$ ghci <<< 'import Language.Copilot'
It should end with a line like the following and not print any error messages:
ghci> ghci> Leaving GHCi.
To use Copilot you must have a Haskell compiler (GHC) and the package manager Cabal. We currently support all versions of GHC from 8.6.5 to modern versions (9.6 as of this writing). You can install the toolchain using ghcup, as well as with Homebrew:
$ brew install ghc cabal-install
Once the compiler is installed, install Copilot from Hackage with:
$ cabal v2-install --lib copilot
To test that Copilot is available, execute the following:
$ ghci <<< 'import Language.Copilot'
It should end with a line like the following and not print any error messages:
ghci> ghci> Leaving GHCi.
Feel free to open an issue if you are unable to install Copilot following these instructions.
There is a TravisCI file at the root of the repository that may help with troubleshooting the installation. Our issues often include comments with Dockerfiles listing the steps necessary to install Copilot from scratch.
Here follows a simple example of a heating system. More examples can be found in the examples directory of the main repository.
-- This example implements a simple home heating system. The system heats
-- when the temperature gets too low, and stops when it is high enough. It read
-- temperature as a byte (range -50C to 100C) and translates this to Celsius.
module Heater where
import Language.Copilot
import Copilot.Compile.C99
import Prelude hiding ((>), (<), div)
-- External temperature as a byte, ranging from -50C to 100C.
temp :: Stream Word8
temp = extern "temperature" Nothing
-- Temperature in Celsius.
--
-- We need to cast the Word8 to a Float. This is an unsafeCast, as there
-- is no direct relation between Word8 and Float.
ctemp :: Stream Float
ctemp = (unsafeCast temp) * (150.0 / 255.0) - 50.0
spec = do
-- Triggers that fire when the ctemp is too low or too high,
-- pass the current ctemp as an argument.
trigger "heaton" (ctemp < 18.0) [arg ctemp]
trigger "heatoff" (ctemp > 21.0) [arg ctemp]
-- Compile the spec
main = reify spec >>= compile "heater"
If you save this example in a file Heater.hs
and run:
$ runhaskell Heater.hs
it will produce the files heater.c
, heater.h
and heater_types.h
,
containing, respectively, the implementation of the monitors, the interface,
and a declaration of any types declared in the specification (empty in this
case).
If you clone the repository, the examples in the examples/
directory can be
run from the root of the project. As a rule of thumb, each example is named
after the filename (without extension) in lowercase letters, and directory
separators replaced with a '-'. For example:
$ cabal run addmult -f examples
$ cabal run counter -f examples
$ cabal run what4-arithmetic -f examples
Disclaimer: The following projects are not part of Copilot. Their mention here does not constitute any form of endorsement.
-
Ogma is a NASA tool to facilitate the integration of safe runtime monitors into other systems, including those built using NASA's Core Flight System or the Robot Operating System (ROS 2).
-
arduino-copilot facilitates building copilot applications that run on Arduino.
-
sketch-frp-copilot extends Copilot with an FRP-like interface.
-
zephyr-copilot facilitates building copilot applications that run on boards supported by the Zephyr project.
A tutorial on Copilot can be found here.
The API is documented throughout the different libraries and published on Hackage:
- copilot
- copilot-c99
- copilot-core
- copilot-interpreter
- copilot-language
- copilot-libraries
- copilot-prettyprinter
- copilot-theorem
The best introduction to the fundamentals of Copilot apart from the tutorial is:
Other relevant papers include:
-
Runtime Verification in Real-Time with the Copilot Language: A Tutorial
-
Trustworthy Runtime Verification via Bisimulation (Experience Report)
-
Compiling an Haskell EDSL to C: A new C back-end for the Copilot runtime verification framework
-
Design and Testing of an Approach to Automated In-Flight Safety Risk Management for sUAS Operations
-
Automated Translation of Natural Language Requirements to Runtime Monitors
-
From Requirements to Autonomous Flight: An Overview of the Monitoring ICAROUS Project
-
Monitoring Distributed Real-Time Systems: A Survey and Future Directions
For further information, including links to more documentation and the tutorial, please visit the Copilot website: https://copilot-language.github.io.
We'd love to receive your contributions, be it code fixes, new features, bug reports, discussions, or anything else that can help the Copilot project.
If you have any comments, questions, ideas, or other topics that you think may be of interest, start a new discussion here.
If you would like to contribute a fix for an issue, please comment on the issue indicating that you want to fix it so that we can assign it to you and track the status on our end. If the issue does not exist, create it first or ask that an existing discussion be promoted to an issue.
If you are unsure about whether your submission should be filed as an issue or as a discussion, file it as a discussion. We can always move it later.
To facilitate merging any pull requests that you send, please:
- Reference the issue you are addressing with the text
Refs #<ISSUENUMBER>.
at the end of the subject line of each commit message, in every commit. Replace<ISSUENUMBER>
with the number of the specific issue that your pull request is addressing. - Describe what each commit does individually in the commit's message. It's best to err on the side of being more descriptive than less.
- Update the CHANGELOGs in the last commit(s).
You can take a look at the repository's commit history to better understand the process we follow. Click on each commit to see how we write commit messages.
Copilot is currently maintained by:
- Alwyn Goodloe
- Ivan Perez
Past and current team members also include (in alphabetical order):
- Macallan Cruff
- Frank Dedden
- Chris Hathhorn
- Georges-Axel Jolayan
- Jonathan Laurent
- Eli Mendelson
- Robin Morisset
- Sebastian Niller
- Lauren Pick
- Lee Pike
- Will Pogge
- Ryan Spring
- Laura Titolo
- Nis Wegmann
For a complete list of contributors, including external contributors, see: https://github.com/Copilot-Language/copilot/graphs/contributors
We are grateful for NASA Contract NNL08AD13T to Galois, Inc. and the National Institute of Aerospace, which partially supported this work.
Additionally NASA Langley contracts 80LARC17C0004 and NNL09AA00A supported further development of Copilot.