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This book presents in their basic form the most important models of computation, their basic programming paradigms, and their mathematical descriptions, both concrete and abstract. Each model is accompanied by relevant formal techniques for reasoning on it and for proving some properties. After preliminary chapters that introduce the notions of structure and meaning, semantic methods, inference rules, and logic programming, the authors arrange their chapters into parts on IMP, a simple imperative language; HOFL, a higher-order functional language; concurrent, nondeterministic and interactive models; and probabilistic/stochastic models. The authors have class-tested the book content over many years, and it will be valuable for graduate and advanced undergraduate students of theoretical computer science and distributed systems, and for researchers in this domain. Each chapter of the book concludes with a list of exercises addressing the key techniques introduced, solutions to selected exercises are offered at the end of the book.
This book presents in their basic form the most important models of computation, their basic programming paradigms, and their mathematical descriptions, both concrete and abstract. Each model is accompanied by relevant formal techniques for reasoning on it and for proving some properties. After preliminary chapters that introduce the notions of structure and meaning, semantic methods, inference rules, and logic programming, the authors arrange their chapters into parts on IMP, a simple imperative language; HOFL, a higher-order functional language; concurrent, nondeterministic and interactive models; and probabilistic/stochastic models. The authors have class-tested the book content over many years, and it will be valuable for graduate and advanced undergraduate students of theoretical computer science and distributed systems, and for researchers in this domain. Each chapter of the book concludes with a list of exercises addressing the key techniques introduced, solutions to selected exercises are offered at the end of the book.
This book constitutes the refereed proceedings of the 6th International Symposium on Trustworthy Global Computing, TGC 2011, held in Aachen, Germany, in June 2011. The 14 revised full papers presented were carefully reviewed and selected from 25 submissions. The papers are organized in topical sections on modeling formalisms for concurrent systems; model checking and quantitative extensions thereof; semantics and analysis of modern programming languages; probabilistic models for concurrency; and testing and run-time verification.
This volumecontainstheproceedingsofthe 5thInternationalWorkshoponWeb Services and Formal Methods (WS-FM 2008) held during September 4-5, 2008 in Milan, Italy, co-located with the 6th International Conference on Business Process Management (BPM 2008). Previous editions of the workshop were held in Pisa, Italy (WS-FM 2004), Versailles, France(WS-FM 2005), Vienna, Austria (WS-FM 2006) and Brisbane, Australia (WS-FM 2007). The aim of the workshop series is to bring together researchers working on web servicesand formal methods in order to catalyzefruitful collaboration. Web service (WS) technology provides standard mechanisms and protocols for - scribing, locatingandinvokingservicesavailableallovertheweb. Existinginfr- tructuresalreadyenableprovidersto describeservicesintermsoftheirinterface, accesspolicyandbehavior, andto combinesimpler servicesintomorestructured andcomplexones. However, researchisstillneededto moveWStechnologyfrom skilled handcrafting to well-engineeredpractice. Formal methods can play a f- damental role in the shaping of such innovations. For instance, they can help us de?ne unambiguous semantics for the languages and protocols that underpin existing WS infrastructures, and provide a basis for checking the conformance and compliance of bundled services. The WS-FM series has a strong tradition of attracting submissions on formal approaches to enterprise systems modeling in general, and business processmodeling in particular. Potentially, this couldhave a signi?cant impact on the on-going standardization e?orts for WS technology. The main topics of the workshop include: formal approaches to servi- orientedanalysisanddesign, to enterprisemodeling and business processmod- ing; WS coordination and transactions frameworks; formal comparison of di?- ent models proposed for WS protocols and standards; types and logics for WS; goal-drivenandsemantics-baseddiscoveryandcompositionofWS;model-driven development, testing, and analysis of WS; security, performance and quality of services; innovative application scenari
This book constitutes the thoroughly refereed post-proceedings of the Second Symposium on Trustworthy Global Computing, TGC 2006, held in Lucca, Italy, in November 2006. The 14 revised papers presented together with 2 keynote lectures were carefully reviewed and selected from 32 submissions. The papers are organized in topical sections on types to discipline interactions, calculi for distributed systems, flexible modeling, algorithms and systems for global computing, as well as security, anonymity and type safety. The book starts off with activity reviews of four FP6 programmes of the European Union: Aeolus, Mobius, Sensoria, and Catnets.
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