1 research outputs found

    Subjective Simulation as a Notion of Morphism for Composing Concurrent Resources

    Full text link
    Recent approaches to verifying programs in separation logics for concurrency have used state transition systems (STSs) to specify the atomic operations of programs. A key challenge in the setting has been to compose such STSs into larger ones, while enabling programs specified under one STS to be linked to a larger one, without reverification. This paper develops a notion of morphism between two STSs which permits such lifting. The morphisms are a constructive form of simulation between the STSs, and lead to a general and concise proof system. We illustrate the concept and its generality on several disparate examples, including staged construction of a readers/writers lock and its proof, and of proofs about quiescence when concurrent programs are executed without external interference
    corecore