• DocumentCode
    2721653
  • Title

    Reactive modules

  • Author

    Alur, Rajeev ; Henzinger, Thomas A.

  • fYear
    1996
  • fDate
    27-30 Jul 1996
  • Firstpage
    207
  • Lastpage
    218
  • Abstract
    We present a formal model for concurrent systems. The model represents synchronous and asynchronous components in a uniform framework that supports compositional (assume-guarantee) and hierarchical (stepwise refinement) reasoning. While synchronous models are based on a notion of atomic computation step, and asynchronous models remove that notion by introducing stuttering, our model is based on a flexible notion of what constitutes a computation step: by applying an abstraction operator to a system, arbitrarily many consecutive steps can be collapsed into a single step. The abstraction operator, which may turn an asynchronous system into a synchronous one, allows us to describe systems at various levels of temporal detail. For describing systems at various levels of spatial detail, we use a hiding operator that may turn a synchronous system into an asynchronous one. We illustrate the model with diverse examples from synchronous circuits, asynchronous shared-memory programs, and synchronous message passing
  • Keywords
    computational complexity; formal logic; logic testing; parallel processing; assume-guarantee; asynchronous models; asynchronous shared-memory programs; concurrent systems; reactive modules; stepwise refinement; synchronous circuits; synchronous message passing; synchronous models; uniform framework; Adders; Circuits; Computer aided instruction; Contracts; Delay effects; Engineering profession; Hardware; Message passing; Scalability; Wires;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Logic in Computer Science, 1996. LICS '96. Proceedings., Eleventh Annual IEEE Symposium on
  • Conference_Location
    New Brunswick, NJ
  • ISSN
    1043-6871
  • Print_ISBN
    0-8186-7463-6
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/LICS.1996.561320
  • Filename
    561320