AbstractThe notion of joint actions provides a natural execution model for a specification language, when temporal logic of actions is used for formal reasoning. We extend this basis with scheduling, the role of which is to enforce liveness properties and to introduce real-time properties. This is done in a way that agrees with the partial-order view of computations and can be applied already in the early stages of specification and design. This leads to distinguishing between schedulings that are totally correct, partially correct, or incorrect with respect to liveness properties. A general scheduling policy of durational actions is formulated from which any reasonable scheduling can be obtained by reducing its nondeterminism. When this po...
. We extend the specification language of temporal logic, the corresponding verification framework, ...
This paper presents an assume-guarantee specification theory for modular synthesis and verification ...
In this paper we present an assume-guarantee specification theory (aka in-terface theory from [14]) ...
AbstractThe notion of joint actions provides a natural execution model for a specification language,...
In this paper we define an equivalence and a modal logic for real-time systems. The equivalence is b...
To date, research in reasoning about timing properties of real-time programs has considered specific...
The behaviour of a real-time system depends on the scheduler used. The order in which tasks are exec...
Action systems are a formalism for representing concurrent behaviours, based on interleaved atomic a...
Once strictly the province of assembly-language programmers, real-time computing has developed into ...
Model-Driven Engineering enables to assess a system's model properties since the early phases of its...
This dissertation proposes a formalism for the specification and verification of timing properties o...
Formal methods have proved to be highly beneficial in the requirements specification phase of softwa...
Formal methods have proved to be highly beneficial in the requirements specification phase of softwa...
. The most natural, compositional, way of modeling real-time systems uses a dense domain for time. T...
Action refinement is an essential operation in the design of concurrent systems, real-time or not. I...
. We extend the specification language of temporal logic, the corresponding verification framework, ...
This paper presents an assume-guarantee specification theory for modular synthesis and verification ...
In this paper we present an assume-guarantee specification theory (aka in-terface theory from [14]) ...
AbstractThe notion of joint actions provides a natural execution model for a specification language,...
In this paper we define an equivalence and a modal logic for real-time systems. The equivalence is b...
To date, research in reasoning about timing properties of real-time programs has considered specific...
The behaviour of a real-time system depends on the scheduler used. The order in which tasks are exec...
Action systems are a formalism for representing concurrent behaviours, based on interleaved atomic a...
Once strictly the province of assembly-language programmers, real-time computing has developed into ...
Model-Driven Engineering enables to assess a system's model properties since the early phases of its...
This dissertation proposes a formalism for the specification and verification of timing properties o...
Formal methods have proved to be highly beneficial in the requirements specification phase of softwa...
Formal methods have proved to be highly beneficial in the requirements specification phase of softwa...
. The most natural, compositional, way of modeling real-time systems uses a dense domain for time. T...
Action refinement is an essential operation in the design of concurrent systems, real-time or not. I...
. We extend the specification language of temporal logic, the corresponding verification framework, ...
This paper presents an assume-guarantee specification theory for modular synthesis and verification ...
In this paper we present an assume-guarantee specification theory (aka in-terface theory from [14]) ...