Actions and Events in Concurrent Systems Design
Journal Articles
Overview
Research
Identity
Additional Document Info
View All
Overview
abstract
In this work, having in mind the construction of concurrent systems from
components, we discuss the difference between actions and events. For this
discussion, we propose an(other) architecture description language in which
actions and events are made explicit in the description of a component and a
system. Our work builds from the ideas set forth by the categorical approach to
the construction of software based systems from components advocated by Goguen
and Burstall, in the context of institutions, and by Fiadeiro and Maibaum, in
the context of temporal logic. In this context, we formalize a notion of a
component as an element of an indexed category and we elicit a notion of a
morphism between components as morphisms of this category. Moreover, we
elaborate on how this formalization captures, in a convenient manner, the
underlying structure of a component and the basic interaction mechanisms for
putting components together. Further, we advance some ideas on how certain
matters related to the openness and the compositionality of a component/system
may be described in terms of classes of morphisms, thus potentially supporting
a compositional rely/guarantee reasoning.