31,628 research outputs found
Convolution, Separation and Concurrency
A notion of convolution is presented in the context of formal power series
together with lifting constructions characterising algebras of such series,
which usually are quantales. A number of examples underpin the universality of
these constructions, the most prominent ones being separation logics, where
convolution is separating conjunction in an assertion quantale; interval
logics, where convolution is the chop operation; and stream interval functions,
where convolution is used for analysing the trajectories of dynamical or
real-time systems. A Hoare logic is constructed in a generic fashion on the
power series quantale, which applies to each of these examples. In many cases,
commutative notions of convolution have natural interpretations as concurrency
operations.Comment: 39 page
Linear Time Logics - A Coalgebraic Perspective
We describe a general approach to deriving linear time logics for a wide
variety of state-based, quantitative systems, by modelling the latter as
coalgebras whose type incorporates both branching behaviour and linear
behaviour. Concretely, we define logics whose syntax is determined by the
choice of linear behaviour and whose domain of truth values is determined by
the choice of branching, and we provide two equivalent semantics for them: a
step-wise semantics amenable to automata-based verification, and a path-based
semantics akin to those of standard linear time logics. We also provide a
semantic characterisation of the associated notion of logical equivalence, and
relate it to previously-defined maximal trace semantics for such systems.
Instances of our logics support reasoning about the possibility, likelihood or
minimal cost of exhibiting a given linear time property. We conclude with a
generalisation of the logics, dual in spirit to logics with discounting, which
increases their practical appeal in the context of resource-aware computation
by incorporating a notion of offsetting.Comment: Major revision of previous version: Sections 4 and 5 generalise the
results in the previous version, with new proofs; Section 6 contains new
result
Generic Trace Logics
We combine previous work on coalgebraic logic with the coalgebraic traces
semantics of Hasuo, Jacobs, and Sokolova
Linear and Branching System Metrics
We extend the classical system relations of trace\ud
inclusion, trace equivalence, simulation, and bisimulation to a quantitative setting in which propositions are interpreted not as boolean values, but as elements of arbitrary metric spaces.\ud
\ud
Trace inclusion and equivalence give rise to asymmetrical and symmetrical linear distances, while simulation and bisimulation give rise to asymmetrical and symmetrical branching distances. We study the relationships among these distances, and we provide a full logical characterization of the distances in terms of quantitative versions of LTL and Ī¼-calculus. We show that, while trace inclusion (resp. equivalence) coincides with simulation (resp. bisimulation) for deterministic boolean transition systems, linear\ud
and branching distances do not coincide for deterministic metric transition systems. Finally, we provide algorithms for computing the distances over finite systems, together with a matching lower complexity bound
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