We focus on the realizability problem of Message Sequence Graphs (MSG), i.e. the problem whether a given MSG specification is correctly distributable among parallel components communicating via messages. This fundamental problem of MSG is known to be undecidable. We introduce a well motivated restricted class of MSG, so called controllable-choice MSG, and show that all its models are realizable and moreover it is decidable whether a given MSG model is a member of this class. In more detail, this class of MSG specifications admits a deadlock-free realization by overloading existing messages with additional bounded control data. We also show that the presented class is the largest known subclass of MSG that allows for deadlock-free realizatio...
AbstractMessage sequence charts (MSCs) are an attractive visual formalism widely used to capture sys...
. Scenario-based specifications such as message sequence charts (MSC) offer an intuitive and visual ...
We work on an extension of the Population Protocol model of Angluin et al. that allows edges of the ...
Scenario-based specifications such as message sequence charts (MSC) offer an intuitive and visual wa...
AbstractScenario-based specifications such as message sequence charts (MSC) offer an intuitive and v...
Message Sequence Charts (MSCs) are an attractive visual formalism widely used to capture system requ...
An effective way to assemble partial views of a distributed system is to compute their product. Give...
We give a detailed construction of a finite-state transition system for a com-connected Message Sequ...
Software designers draw Message Sequence Charts for early modeling of the individual behaviors they ...
Message Sequence Charts (MSCs) are an attractive visual formalism used during the early stages of de...
AbstractWe study the notion of safe realizability for high-level message sequence charts (HMSCs) (Pr...
Message sequence charts (MSCs) are an attractive visual formalism widely used to capture system requ...
We extend the formal developments for message sequence charts (MSCs) to support scenarios with lost ...
Message sequence charts (MSCs) are an attractive visual formalism widely used to capture system requ...
Message Sequence Charts (MSCs) are an attractive visual formalism widely used to capture system requ...
AbstractMessage sequence charts (MSCs) are an attractive visual formalism widely used to capture sys...
. Scenario-based specifications such as message sequence charts (MSC) offer an intuitive and visual ...
We work on an extension of the Population Protocol model of Angluin et al. that allows edges of the ...
Scenario-based specifications such as message sequence charts (MSC) offer an intuitive and visual wa...
AbstractScenario-based specifications such as message sequence charts (MSC) offer an intuitive and v...
Message Sequence Charts (MSCs) are an attractive visual formalism widely used to capture system requ...
An effective way to assemble partial views of a distributed system is to compute their product. Give...
We give a detailed construction of a finite-state transition system for a com-connected Message Sequ...
Software designers draw Message Sequence Charts for early modeling of the individual behaviors they ...
Message Sequence Charts (MSCs) are an attractive visual formalism used during the early stages of de...
AbstractWe study the notion of safe realizability for high-level message sequence charts (HMSCs) (Pr...
Message sequence charts (MSCs) are an attractive visual formalism widely used to capture system requ...
We extend the formal developments for message sequence charts (MSCs) to support scenarios with lost ...
Message sequence charts (MSCs) are an attractive visual formalism widely used to capture system requ...
Message Sequence Charts (MSCs) are an attractive visual formalism widely used to capture system requ...
AbstractMessage sequence charts (MSCs) are an attractive visual formalism widely used to capture sys...
. Scenario-based specifications such as message sequence charts (MSC) offer an intuitive and visual ...
We work on an extension of the Population Protocol model of Angluin et al. that allows edges of the ...