58 research outputs found
Simulation of Quantum Mechanics Using Reactive Programming
We implement in a reactive programming framework a simulation of three
aspects of quantum mechanics: self-interference, state superposition, and
entanglement. The simulation basically consists in a cellular automaton
embedded in a synchronous environment which defines global discrete instants
and broadcast events. The implementation shows how a simulation of fundamental
aspects of quantum mechanics can be obtained from the synchronous parallel
combination of a small number of elementary components
Resource Control for Synchronous Cooperative Threads
We develop new methods to statically bound the resources needed for the
execution of systems of concurrent, interactive threads. Our study is concerned
with a \emph{synchronous} model of interaction based on cooperative threads
whose execution proceeds in synchronous rounds called instants. Our
contribution is a system of compositional static analyses to guarantee that
each instant terminates and to bound the size of the values computed by the
system as a function of the size of its parameters at the beginning of the
instant. Our method generalises an approach designed for first-order functional
languages that relies on a combination of standard termination techniques for
term rewriting systems and an analysis of the size of the computed values based
on the notion of quasi-interpretation. We show that these two methods can be
combined to obtain an explicit polynomial bound on the resources needed for the
execution of the system during an instant. As a second contribution, we
introduce a virtual machine and a related bytecode thus producing a precise
description of the resources needed for the execution of a system. In this
context, we present a suitable control flow analysis that allows to formulte
the static analyses for resource control at byte code level
Fine-grained and coarse-grained reactive noninterference
International audienceWe study the security property of noninterference in a core synchronous reactive language that we call CRL. In the synchronous reactive paradigm, programs communicate by means of broadcast events, and their parallel execution is regulated by a notion of instant. We first show that CRL programs are indeed reactive, namely that they always converge to a state of termination or suspension ("end of instant") in a finite number of steps. We define two bisimulation equivalences on CRL programs, corresponding respectively to a fine-grained and to a coarse-grained observation of programs. We show that coarse-grained bisimilarity is more abstract than fine-grained bisimilarity, as it is insensitive to the order of generation of events and to repeated emissions of the same event during an instant. Based on these bisimulations, two properties of Reactive Noninterference (RNI) are introduced, formalising secure information flow. Both properties are time-insensitive and termination-insensitive. Again, coarse-grained RNI is more abstract than fine-grained RNI. Finally, a type system guaranteeing both security properties is presented. Thanks to a design choice of CRL, which offers two separate constructs for loops and iteration, and to refined typing rules, this type system allows for a precise treatment of termination leaks, which are an issue in parallel languages
On affine usages in signal-based communication
We describe a type system for a synchronous pi-calculus formalising the
notion of affine usage in signal-based communication. In particular, we
identify a limited number of usages that preserve affinity and that can be
composed. As a main application of the resulting system, we show that typable
programs are deterministic
Approximate Reachability for Dead Code Elimination in Esterel*
Esterel is an imperative synchronous programming language for the design of reactive systems. Esterel* extends Esterel with a non-instantaneous jump instruction (compatible with concurrency, preemption, etc.) so as to enable powerful source-to-source program transformations, amenable to formal verification. In this work, we propose an approximate reachability algorithm for Esterel* and use its output to remove dead code. We prove the correctness of our techniques
Grounding Synchronous Deterministic Concurrency in Sequential Programming
In this report, we introduce an abstract interval domain I(D; P) and associated fixed point semantics for reasoning about concurrent and sequential variable accesses within a synchronous cycle-based model of computation. The interval domain captures must (lower bound) and cannot (upper bound) information to approximate the synchronisation status of variables consisting of a value status D and an init status P. We use this domain for a new behavioural definition of Berry’s causality analysis for Esterel. This gives a compact and uniform understanding of Esterel-style constructiveness for shared-memory multi-threaded programs. Using this new domain-theoretic characterisation we show that Berry’s constructive semantics is a conservative approximation of the recently proposed sequentially constructive (SC) model of computation. We prove that every Berry-constructive program is sequentially constructive, i.e., deterministic and deadlock-free under sequentially admissible scheduling. This gives, for the first time, a natural interpretation of Berry-constructiveness for main-stream imperative programming in terms of scheduling, where previous results were cast in terms of synchronous circuits. It also opens the door to a direct mapping of Esterel’s signal mechanism into boolean variables that can be set and reset arbitrarily within a tick.
We illustrate the practical usefulness of this mapping by discussing how signal reincarnation is handled efficiently by this transformation, which is of complexity that is linear in progra
Continuation-Passing C: compiling threads to events through continuations
In this paper, we introduce Continuation Passing C (CPC), a programming
language for concurrent systems in which native and cooperative threads are
unified and presented to the programmer as a single abstraction. The CPC
compiler uses a compilation technique, based on the CPS transform, that yields
efficient code and an extremely lightweight representation for contexts. We
provide a proof of the correctness of our compilation scheme. We show in
particular that lambda-lifting, a common compilation technique for functional
languages, is also correct in an imperative language like C, under some
conditions enforced by the CPC compiler. The current CPC compiler is mature
enough to write substantial programs such as Hekate, a highly concurrent
BitTorrent seeder. Our benchmark results show that CPC is as efficient, while
using significantly less space, as the most efficient thread libraries
available.Comment: Higher-Order and Symbolic Computation (2012). arXiv admin note:
substantial text overlap with arXiv:1202.324
Software Model Checking with Explicit Scheduler and Symbolic Threads
In many practical application domains, the software is organized into a set
of threads, whose activation is exclusive and controlled by a cooperative
scheduling policy: threads execute, without any interruption, until they either
terminate or yield the control explicitly to the scheduler. The formal
verification of such software poses significant challenges. On the one side,
each thread may have infinite state space, and might call for abstraction. On
the other side, the scheduling policy is often important for correctness, and
an approach based on abstracting the scheduler may result in loss of precision
and false positives. Unfortunately, the translation of the problem into a
purely sequential software model checking problem turns out to be highly
inefficient for the available technologies. We propose a software model
checking technique that exploits the intrinsic structure of these programs.
Each thread is translated into a separate sequential program and explored
symbolically with lazy abstraction, while the overall verification is
orchestrated by the direct execution of the scheduler. The approach is
optimized by filtering the exploration of the scheduler with the integration of
partial-order reduction. The technique, called ESST (Explicit Scheduler,
Symbolic Threads) has been implemented and experimentally evaluated on a
significant set of benchmarks. The results demonstrate that ESST technique is
way more effective than software model checking applied to the sequentialized
programs, and that partial-order reduction can lead to further performance
improvements.Comment: 40 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in journal of logical
methods in computer scienc
Deterministic Concurrency: A Clock-Synchronised Shared Memory Approach
International audienceSynchronous Programming (SP) is a universal computational principle that provides deterministic concurrency. The same input sequence with the same timing always results in the same externally observable output sequence, even if the internal behaviour generates uncertainty in the scheduling of concurrent memory accesses. Consequently, SP languages have always been strongly founded on mathematical semantics that support formal program analysis. So far, however, communication has been constrained to a set of primitive clock-synchronised shared memory (csm) data types, such as data-flow registers, streams and signals with restricted read and write accesses that limit modularity and behavioural abstractions. This paper proposes an extension to the SP theory which retains the advantages of deterministic concurrency, but allows communication to occur at higher levels of abstraction than currently supported by SP data types. Our approach is as follows. To avoid data races, each csm type publishes a policy interface for specifying the admissibility and precedence of its access methods. Each instance of the csm type has to be policy-coherent, meaning it must behave deterministically under its own policy-a natural requirement if the goal is to build deterministic systems that use these types. In a policy-constructive system, all access methods can be scheduled in a policy-conformant way for all the types without deadlocking. In this paper, we show that a policy-constructive program exhibits deterministic concurrency in the sense that all policy-conformant interleavings produce the same input-output behaviour. Policies are conservative and support the csm types existing in current SP languages. Technically, we introduce a kernel SP language that uses arbitrary policy-driven csm types. A big-step fixed-point semantics for this language is developed for which we prove determinism and termination of constructive programs
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