364 research outputs found

    Priced Timed Petri Nets

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    We consider priced timed Petri nets, i.e., unbounded Petri nets where each token carries a real-valued clock. Transition arcs are labeled with time intervals, which specify constraints on the ages of tokens. Furthermore, our cost model assigns token storage costs per time unit to places, and firing costs to transitions. This general model strictly subsumes both priced timed automata and unbounded priced Petri nets. We study the cost of computations that reach a given control-state. In general, a computation with minimal cost may not exist, due to strict inequalities in the time constraints. However, we show that the infimum of the costs to reach a given control-state is computable in the case where all place and transition costs are non-negative. On the other hand, if negative costs are allowed, then the question whether a given control-state is reachable with zero overall cost becomes undecidable. In fact, this negative result holds even in the simpler case of discrete time (i.e., integer-valued clocks).Comment: 51 pages. LMCS journal version of arXiv:1104.061

    Computing Optimal Coverability Costs in Priced Timed Petri Nets

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    We consider timed Petri nets, i.e., unbounded Petri nets where each token carries a real-valued clock. Transition arcs are labeled with time intervals, which specify constraints on the ages of tokens. Our cost model assigns token storage costs per time unit to places, and firing costs to transitions. We study the cost to reach a given control-state. In general, a cost-optimal run may not exist. However, we show that the infimum of the costs is computable.Comment: 26 pages. Contribution to LICS 201

    Minimal Cost Reachability/Coverability in Priced Timed Petri Nets

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    Abstract. We extend discrete-timed Petri nets with a cost model that assigns token storage costs to places and firing costs to transitions, and study the minimal cost reachability/coverability problem. We show that the minimal costs are computable if all storage/transition costs are non-negative, while even the question of zero-cost coverability is undecidable in the case of general integer costs.

    Timed Basic Parallel Processes

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    Timed basic parallel processes (TBPP) extend communication-free Petri nets (aka. BPP or commutative context-free grammars) by a global notion of time. TBPP can be seen as an extension of timed automata (TA) with context-free branching rules, and as such may be used to model networks of independent timed automata with process creation. We show that the coverability and reachability problems (with unary encoded target multiplicities) are PSPACE-complete and EXPTIME-complete, respectively. For the special case of 1-clock TBPP, both are NP-complete and hence not more complex than for untimed BPP. This contrasts with known super-Ackermannian-completeness and undecidability results for general timed Petri nets. As a result of independent interest, and basis for our NP upper bounds, we show that the reachability relation of 1-clock TA can be expressed by a formula of polynomial size in the existential fragment of linear arithmetic, which improves on recent results from the literature

    Zenoness for Timed Pushdown Automata

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    Timed pushdown automata are pushdown automata extended with a finite set of real-valued clocks. Additionaly, each symbol in the stack is equipped with a value representing its age. The enabledness of a transition may depend on the values of the clocks and the age of the topmost symbol. Therefore, dense-timed pushdown automata subsume both pushdown automata and timed automata. We have previously shown that the reachability problem for this model is decidable. In this paper, we study the zenoness problem and show that it is EXPTIME-complete.Comment: In Proceedings INFINITY 2013, arXiv:1402.661

    Verification of priced and timed extensions of Petri Nets with multile instances

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    Tesis inédita de la Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Facultad de Informática, Departamento de Sistemas Informáticos y Computación, leída el 25-01-2016Las redes de Petri son un lenguaje formal muy adecuado para la modelizacíon, ańalisis y verificacíon de sistemas concurrentes con infinitos estados. En particular, son muy apropiadas para estudiar las propiedades de seguridad de dichos sistemas, dadas sus buenas propiedades de decidibilidad. Sin embargo, en muchas ocasiones las redes de Petri carecen de la expresividad necesaria para representar algunas caracteŕısticas fundamentales de los sistemas que se manejan hoy en d́ıa, como el manejo de tiempo real, costes reales, o la presencia de varios procesos con un ńumero no acotado de estados ejecut́andose en paralelo. En la literatura se han definido y estudiado algunas extensiones de las redes de Petri para la representaci ́on de las caracteŕısticas anteriores. Por ejemplo, las “Redes de Petri Temporizadas” [83, 10](TPN) incluyen el manejo de tiempo real y las ν-redes de Petri [78](ν-PN) son capaces de representar un ńumero no acotado de procesos con infinitos estados ejecut́andose concurrentemente. En esta tesis definimos varias extensiones que réunen estas dos caracteŕısticas y estudiamos sus propiedades de decidibilidad. En primer lugar definimos las “ν-Redes de Petri Temporizadas”, que réunen las caracteŕısticas expresivas de las TPN y las ν-PN. Este nuevo modelo es capaz de representar sistemas con un ńumero no acotado de procesos o instancias, donde cada proceso es representado por un nombre diferente, y tiene un ńumero no acotado de relojes reales. En este modelo un reloj de una instancia debe satisfacer ciertas condiciones (pertenecer a un intervalo dado) para formar parte en el disparo de una transicíon. Desafortunadamente, demostramos que la verificacíon de propiedades de seguridad es indecidible para este modelo...The model of Petri nets is a formal modeling language which is very suitable for the analysis and verification of infinite-state concurrent systems. In particular, due to its good decidability properties, it is very appropriate to study safety properties over such systems. However, Petri nets frequently lack the expressiveness to represent several essential characteristics of nowadays systems such as real time, real costs, or the managing of several parallel processes, each with an unbounded number of states. Several extensions of Petri nets have been defined and studied in the literature to fix these shortcomings. For example, Timed Petri nets [83, 10] deal with real time and ν-Petri nets [78] are able to represent an unbounded number of different infinite-state processes running concurrently. In this thesis we define new extensions which encompass these two characteristics, and study their decidability properties. First, we define Timed ν-Petri nets by joining together Timed Petri nets and ν-Petri nets. The new model represents systems in which each process (also called instance) is represented by a different pure name, and it is endowed with an unbounded number of clocks. Then, a clock of an instance must satisfy certain given conditions (belonging to a given interval) in order to take part in the firing of a transition. Unfortunately, we prove that the verification of safety properties is undecidable for this model. In fact, it is undecidable even if we only consider two clocks per process. We restrict this model and define Locally-Synchronous ν-Petri nets by considering only one clock per instance, and successfully prove the decidability of safety properties for this model. Moreover, we study the expressiveness of Locally-Synchronous ν-Petri nets and prove that it is the most expressive non Turing-complete extension of Petri nets with respect to the languages they accept...Depto. de Sistemas Informáticos y ComputaciónFac. de InformáticaTRUEunpu

    10031 Abstracts Collection -- Quantitative Models: Expressiveness and Analysis

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    From Jan 18 to Jan 22, 2010, the Dagstuhl Seminar 10031 ``Quantitative Models: Expressiveness and Analysis \u27\u27 was held in Schloss Dagstuhl~--~Leibniz Center for Informatics. During the seminar, several participants presented their current research, and ongoing work and open problems were discussed. Abstracts of the presentations given during the seminar as well as abstracts of seminar results and ideas are put together in this paper. The first section describes the seminar topics and goals in general. Links to extended abstracts or full papers are provided, if available

    Efficient Analysis and Synthesis of Complex Quantitative Systems

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    Petri Nets with Time and Cost

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    We consider timed Petri nets, i.e., unbounded Petri nets where each token carries a real-valued clock. Transition arcs are labeled with time intervals, which specify constraints on the ages of tokens. Our cost model assigns token storage costs per time unit to places, and firing costs to transitions. We study the cost to reach a given control-state. In general, a cost-optimal run may not exist. However,we show that the infimum of the costs is computable.Comment: In Proceedings Infinity 2012, arXiv:1302.310
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