AbstractThis paper describes a general framework for modeling fairness for communicating processes, based on the notion of fair traces. Intuitively, a fair trace is an abstract representation of a fair computation, providing enough structure to capture the important essence of the computation (e.g., the sequences of states encountered or the communications made along it) as well as any contextual information necessary for compositionality. The key for determining this necessary contextual information is the introduction of parameterized fairness notions, which permit compositional characterizations of fairness. In contrast, most traditional treatments of fairness are based on operational semantics [8,2] and do not lend themselves naturally ...
AbstractVarious principles of proof have been proposed to reason about fairness. This paper addresse...
In this paper we provide a simple characterization of (weak) fairness of components as defined by Co...
In this paper we provide a simple characterization of (weak) fairness of components as defined by Co...
AbstractThis paper describes a general framework for modeling fairness for communicating processes, ...
AbstractWe construct several denotational semantics for communicating processes that incorporate ass...
AbstractWe present a denotational semantics for a language of parallel communicating processes based...
AbstractFairness — the guarantee that every process enabled sufficiently often will eventually make ...
AbstractIn this paper, we define fair computations in the π-calculus [Milner, R., Parrow, J. & Walke...
International audienceIn this paper we investigate fair computations in the $\pi$-calculus \cite{MPW...
AbstractIn this paper we provide a simple characterization of (weak) fairness of components as defin...
Transactional events are a recent concurrency abstraction that combines first-class synchronous mess...
AbstractFairness of a program execution, c, is usually expressed such that all objects which are suf...
AbstractThis paper examines the joint influence of fairness and asynchrony on the semantic modelling...
AbstractIn this paper we provide a simple characterization of (weak) fairness of components as defin...
AbstractIn the analysis and design of concurrent systems, it can be useful to assume fairness among ...
AbstractVarious principles of proof have been proposed to reason about fairness. This paper addresse...
In this paper we provide a simple characterization of (weak) fairness of components as defined by Co...
In this paper we provide a simple characterization of (weak) fairness of components as defined by Co...
AbstractThis paper describes a general framework for modeling fairness for communicating processes, ...
AbstractWe construct several denotational semantics for communicating processes that incorporate ass...
AbstractWe present a denotational semantics for a language of parallel communicating processes based...
AbstractFairness — the guarantee that every process enabled sufficiently often will eventually make ...
AbstractIn this paper, we define fair computations in the π-calculus [Milner, R., Parrow, J. & Walke...
International audienceIn this paper we investigate fair computations in the $\pi$-calculus \cite{MPW...
AbstractIn this paper we provide a simple characterization of (weak) fairness of components as defin...
Transactional events are a recent concurrency abstraction that combines first-class synchronous mess...
AbstractFairness of a program execution, c, is usually expressed such that all objects which are suf...
AbstractThis paper examines the joint influence of fairness and asynchrony on the semantic modelling...
AbstractIn this paper we provide a simple characterization of (weak) fairness of components as defin...
AbstractIn the analysis and design of concurrent systems, it can be useful to assume fairness among ...
AbstractVarious principles of proof have been proposed to reason about fairness. This paper addresse...
In this paper we provide a simple characterization of (weak) fairness of components as defined by Co...
In this paper we provide a simple characterization of (weak) fairness of components as defined by Co...