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Deciding global partial-order properties
Author(s) -
Rajeev Alur,
Ken McMillan,
Doron Peled
Publication year - 1998
Publication title -
lecture notes in computer science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Book series
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.249
H-Index - 400
eISSN - 1611-3349
pISSN - 0302-9743
DOI - 10.1007/bfb0055039
Subject(s) - undecidable problem , partial order reduction , satisfiability , model checking , computer science , decidability , operator (biology) , concurrency , boolean satisfiability problem , semantics (computer science) , asynchronous communication , promela , linear temporal logic , temporal logic , theoretical computer science , literal (mathematical logic) , interleaving , algorithm , programming language , computer network , biochemistry , chemistry , repressor , transcription factor , gene , operating system
Model checking of asynchronous systems is traditionally based on the interleaving model, where an execution is modeled by a total order between events. Recently, the use of partial order semantics that allows independent events of concurrent processes to be unordered is becoming popular. Temporal logics that are interpreted over partial orders allow specifications relating global snapshots, and permit reduction algorithms to generate only one representative linearization of every possible partial-order execution during state-space search. This paper considers the satisfiability and the model checking problems for temporal logics interpreted over partially ordered sets of global configurations. For such logics, only undecidability results have been proved previously. In this paper, we present an Expspace decision procedure for a fragment that contains an eventuality operator and its dual. We also sharpen previous undecidability results, which used global predicates over configurations. We show that although our logic allows only local propositions (over events), it becomes undecidable when adding some natural until operator.

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