3 research outputs found

    Metric semantics for true concurrent real time

    Get PDF
    This paper investigates the use of a complete metric space framework for providing denotational semantics to a real-time process algebra. The study is carried out in a non-interleaving setting and is based on a timed extension of Langerak's bundle event structures, a variant of Winskel's event structures. The distance function is based on the amount of time to which event structures do ‘agree’. We show that this intuitive notion of distance is a pseudo metric (but not a metric) on the set of timed event structures. A generalisation to equivalence classes of timed event structures in which we abstract from event names and non-executable events (events that can never appear) is shown to be a complete ultra-metric space. We show that the resulting metric semantics is an abstraction of an existing cpo-based denotational and a related operational semantics for the considered language

    Metric semantics for true concurrent real time

    Get PDF
    This paper investigates the use of a complete metric space framework for providing denotational semantics to a real-time process algebra. The study is carried out in a non-interleaving setting and is based on a timed extension of Langerak's bundle event structures, a variant of Winskel's event structures. The distance function of the metric is based on the amount of time to which event structures do `agree'. We show that this intuitive notion of distance is a pseudo metric (but not a metric) on the set of timed event structures. A generalisation to equivalence classes of timed event structures in which we abstract from event identities and non-executable events (events that can never occur) is shown to be a complete ultra-metric space. We present an operational semantics for the considered language and show that the metric semantics is an abstraction of it. The operational semantics is characterised by the absence of synchronisation on the advance of time as opposed to the operational semantics of most real-time calculi. The consistency between our metric and an existing cpo-based denotational semantics is briefly investigated
    corecore