Context-sensitive synchronization-sensitive analysis is undecidable
ACM Transactions on Programming Languages and Systems (TOPLAS) | , Vol 22(2): pp. 416-430
Static program analysis is concerned with the computation of approximations of the runtime behavior of programs. Precise information about a program’s runtime behavior is, in general, uncomputable for various different reasons, and each reason may necessitate making certain approximations in the information computed. This article illustrates one source of difficulty in static analysis of concurrent programs. Specifically, the article shows that an analysis that is simultaneously both context-sensitive and synchronization-sensitive (that is, a context-sensitive analysis that precisely takes into account the constraints on execution order imposed by the synchronization statements in the program) is impossible even for the simplest of analysis problems.