In the original failure-divergence semantic model for Communicating Sequential Processes (CSP) the incomplete treatment of successful process termination, and in particular parallel termination, permitted unnatural processes to be defined where the behaviour of the system did not match the intention of the specification. In response to this problem we propose the introduction of three distinct but related parallel operators that between them provide a transparent and intuitive means for specifying the desired termination of concurrent processes where no such unnatural behaviours take place. We provide a comprehensive account of their semantics, algebraic properties and the relationship between them, and demonstrate that these new operators ...
textabstractThe standard operational semantics of the sequential composition operator gives rise to ...
As part of an effort to give a "truly concurrent" semantics to process algebra, we propose...
In C. A. R. Hoare, S. D. Brookes, and A. D. Roscoe (1984, J. Assoc. Comput. Mach. 31(3), 560) an abs...
In the original failure–divergence semantic model for Communicating Sequential Processes (CSP) the i...
In the original failure-divergence semantic model for Communicating Sequential Processes (CSP), the ...
In proposing theories of how we should design and specify networks of processes it is necessary to s...
Abstract. In previous work the authors investigated the inconsistencies of how suc-cessful terminati...
AbstractThe original CSP was a language for parallel imperative programs communicating by synchroniz...
The parallel language CSP [9], an earlier version of which was described in [7], has become a major ...
Abstract. CSP was originally introduced as a parallel programming language in which sequential imper...
In proposing theories of how we should design and specify networks of processes it is necessary to s...
AbstractWe extend Morgan's well-known derivation of the Failures-Divergences semantics of an action ...
The standard operational semantics of the sequential composition operator gives rise to unbounded br...
The standard operational semantics of the sequential composition operator gives rise to unbounded br...
The standard operational semantics of the sequential composition operator gives rise to unbounded br...
textabstractThe standard operational semantics of the sequential composition operator gives rise to ...
As part of an effort to give a "truly concurrent" semantics to process algebra, we propose...
In C. A. R. Hoare, S. D. Brookes, and A. D. Roscoe (1984, J. Assoc. Comput. Mach. 31(3), 560) an abs...
In the original failure–divergence semantic model for Communicating Sequential Processes (CSP) the i...
In the original failure-divergence semantic model for Communicating Sequential Processes (CSP), the ...
In proposing theories of how we should design and specify networks of processes it is necessary to s...
Abstract. In previous work the authors investigated the inconsistencies of how suc-cessful terminati...
AbstractThe original CSP was a language for parallel imperative programs communicating by synchroniz...
The parallel language CSP [9], an earlier version of which was described in [7], has become a major ...
Abstract. CSP was originally introduced as a parallel programming language in which sequential imper...
In proposing theories of how we should design and specify networks of processes it is necessary to s...
AbstractWe extend Morgan's well-known derivation of the Failures-Divergences semantics of an action ...
The standard operational semantics of the sequential composition operator gives rise to unbounded br...
The standard operational semantics of the sequential composition operator gives rise to unbounded br...
The standard operational semantics of the sequential composition operator gives rise to unbounded br...
textabstractThe standard operational semantics of the sequential composition operator gives rise to ...
As part of an effort to give a "truly concurrent" semantics to process algebra, we propose...
In C. A. R. Hoare, S. D. Brookes, and A. D. Roscoe (1984, J. Assoc. Comput. Mach. 31(3), 560) an abs...