We introduce two observational logics lor reasoning about Distributed Transition Systems (DTS). These logics characterize different classes of properties of DTS computations. The first logic, L?D, is a straightforward generalization of Hennessy-Milner Logic obtained by allowing modalities indexed by partial ordering observations; it is in full agreement with a computationally defined observational equivalence for true concurrency. The second logic, L?p, has as a distinctive feature a past operator which appears co be crucial for adequately describing the interplay of concurrency and nondeterminism. A deeper understanding of L?p is gained by showing that it induces on DTS the same identification of another observational semantics.
Observational logics and true concurrency
De Nicola R;
1990
Abstract
We introduce two observational logics lor reasoning about Distributed Transition Systems (DTS). These logics characterize different classes of properties of DTS computations. The first logic, L?D, is a straightforward generalization of Hennessy-Milner Logic obtained by allowing modalities indexed by partial ordering observations; it is in full agreement with a computationally defined observational equivalence for true concurrency. The second logic, L?p, has as a distinctive feature a past operator which appears co be crucial for adequately describing the interplay of concurrency and nondeterminism. A deeper understanding of L?p is gained by showing that it induces on DTS the same identification of another observational semantics.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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