Separating fairness and well-foundedness for the analysis of fair discrete systems

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Abstract

Fair discrete systems (FDSs) are a computational model of concurrent programs where fairness assumptions are specified in terms of sets of states. The analysis of fair discrete systems involves a non-trivial interplay between fairness and well-foundedness (ranking functions). This interplay has been an obstacle for automation. The contribution of this paper is a new analysis of temporal properties of FDSs. The analysis uses a domain of binary relations over states labeled by sets of indices of fairness requirements. The use of labeled relations separates the reasoning on well-foundedness and fairness. © Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2005.

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Pnueli, A., Podelski, A., & Rybalchenko, A. (2005). Separating fairness and well-foundedness for the analysis of fair discrete systems. In Lecture Notes in Computer Science (Vol. 3440, pp. 124–139). Springer Verlag. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-31980-1_9

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