AbstractThis article presents an extension of the formalism of algebraic specifications to the specification of concurrent systems. The key concept is that of process specifications, which have two hierarchical layers: processes and data. Processes apply to data via an application operator, eventually yielding a set of data as a result. Syntax and semantics of process specifications are presented, with emphasis on methodological issues (how to write hierarchically consistent and complete specifications). A suitable notion of observational congruence is introduced and characterized. A notion of implementation is defined, and a general method for proving correction is considered, based on the notion of serializability proof. A primitive for p...
AbstractTo describe significant properties of concurrent processes a formal algebra is defined whose...
An outline is presented of the SMoLCS methodology for the specification of concurrent systems and la...
AbstractThis paper illustrates how early ideas and simple naive concepts of concurrency theory of th...
AbstractThis article presents an extension of the formalism of algebraic specifications to the speci...
Most software systems are concerned with concurrent systems and thus it is of paramount importance t...
Algebraic Theory of Processes provides the first general and systematic introduction to the semantic...
A technique for specifying concurrent systems is shown, that uses the algebraic specification langua...
With the advent of parallel architectures, distributed programs are used intensively and the questio...
Traditional methods for programming sequential machines are inadequate for specifying parallel syste...
International audienceWith the advent of parallel architectures, distributed programs are used inten...
This thesis is about mathematical structures and techniques related to formal specification and veri...
LOTOS is one of the most recent formal description languages to appear and one of ver...
Specifications define systems. The definition of a system can be stated casually or formally. A form...
We introduce the resource calculus, a string diagrammatic language for concurrent systems. Significa...
We introduce the resource calculus, a string diagrammatic language for concurrent systems. Significa...
AbstractTo describe significant properties of concurrent processes a formal algebra is defined whose...
An outline is presented of the SMoLCS methodology for the specification of concurrent systems and la...
AbstractThis paper illustrates how early ideas and simple naive concepts of concurrency theory of th...
AbstractThis article presents an extension of the formalism of algebraic specifications to the speci...
Most software systems are concerned with concurrent systems and thus it is of paramount importance t...
Algebraic Theory of Processes provides the first general and systematic introduction to the semantic...
A technique for specifying concurrent systems is shown, that uses the algebraic specification langua...
With the advent of parallel architectures, distributed programs are used intensively and the questio...
Traditional methods for programming sequential machines are inadequate for specifying parallel syste...
International audienceWith the advent of parallel architectures, distributed programs are used inten...
This thesis is about mathematical structures and techniques related to formal specification and veri...
LOTOS is one of the most recent formal description languages to appear and one of ver...
Specifications define systems. The definition of a system can be stated casually or formally. A form...
We introduce the resource calculus, a string diagrammatic language for concurrent systems. Significa...
We introduce the resource calculus, a string diagrammatic language for concurrent systems. Significa...
AbstractTo describe significant properties of concurrent processes a formal algebra is defined whose...
An outline is presented of the SMoLCS methodology for the specification of concurrent systems and la...
AbstractThis paper illustrates how early ideas and simple naive concepts of concurrency theory of th...