5 research outputs found

    The Decidability of Verification under Promising 2.0

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    In PLDI'20, Lee et al. introduced the \emph{promising } semantics PS 2.0 of the C++ concurrency that captures most of the common program transformations while satisfying the DRF guarantee. The reachability problem for finite-state programs under PS 2.0 with only release-acquire accesses is already known to be undecidable. Therefore, we address, in this paper, the reachability problem for programs running under PS 2.0 with relaxed accesses together with promises. We show that this problem is undecidable even in the case where the input program has finite state. Given this undecidability result, we consider the fragment of PS 2.0 with only relaxed accesses allowing bounded number of promises. We show that under this restriction, the reachability is decidable, albeit very expensive: it is non-primitive recursive. Given this high complexity with bounded number of promises and the undecidability result for the RA fragment of PS 2.0, we consider a bounded version of the reachability problem. To this end, we bound both the number of promises and the "view-switches", i.e, the number of times the processes may switch their local views of the global memory. We provide a code-to-code translation from an input program under PS 2.0, with relaxed and release-acquire memory accesses along with promises, to a program under SC. This leads to a reduction of the bounded reachability problem under PS 2.0 to the bounded context-switching problem under SC. We have implemented a prototype tool and tested it on a set of benchmarks, demonstrating that many bugs in programs can be found using a small bound

    Programming Languages and Systems

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    This open access book constitutes the proceedings of the 30th European Symposium on Programming, ESOP 2021, which was held during March 27 until April 1, 2021, as part of the European Joint Conferences on Theory and Practice of Software, ETAPS 2021. The conference was planned to take place in Luxembourg and changed to an online format due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The 24 papers included in this volume were carefully reviewed and selected from 79 submissions. They deal with fundamental issues in the specification, design, analysis, and implementation of programming languages and systems

    The Problem of Mutual Exclusion: A New Distributed Solution

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    In both centralized and distributed systems, processes cooperate and compete with each other to access the system resources. Some of these resources must be used exclusively. It is then required that only one process access the shared resource at a given time. This is referred to as the problem of mutual exclusion. Several synchronization mechanisms have been proposed to solve this problem. In this thesis, an effort has been made to compile most of the existing mutual exclusion solutions for both shared memory and message-passing based systems. A new distributed algorithm, which uses a dynamic information structure, is presented to solve the problem of mutual exclusion. It is proved to be free from both deadlock and starvation. This solution is shown to be economical in terms of the number of message exchanges required per critical section execution. Procedures for recovery from both site and link failures are also given

    An implementation of P and V

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    An Axiomatic Definition of Synchronization Primitives

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    The semantics of a pair of synchronization primitives is characterized by three fundamental axioms: boundedness, progress, and fairness. The class of primitives fulfilling the three axioms is semantically defined. Unbuffered communication primitives, the symmetrical P and V operations, and the usual P and V operations are proved to be the three instances of this class. The definitions obtained are used to prove a series of basic theorems on mutual exclusion, producer-consumer coupling, deadlock, and linear and circular arrangements of communicating buffer-processes. An implementation of P and V operations fulfilling the axioms is proposed
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