2022
Autores
Barbosa, LS;
Publicação
FLAP
Abstract
Often referred to as ‘the mathematics of dynamical, state-based systems’, Coalgebra claims to provide a compositional and uniform framework to specify, analyse and reason about state and behaviour in computing. This paper addresses this claim by discussing why Coalgebra matters for the design of models and logics for computational phenomena. To a great extent, in this domain one is interested in properties that are preserved along the system’s evolution, the so-called ‘business rules’ or system’s invariants, as well as in liveness requirements, stating that e.g. some desirable outcome will be eventually produced. Both classes are examples of modal assertions, i.e. properties that are to be interpreted across a transition system capturing the system’s dynamics. The relevance of modal reasoning in computing is witnessed by the fact that most university syllabi in the area include some incursion into modal logic, in particular in its temporal variants. The novelty is that, as it happens with the notions of transition, behaviour, or observational equivalence, modalities in Coalgebra acquire a shape. That is, they become parametric on whatever type of behaviour, and corresponding coinduction scheme, seems appropriate for addressing the problem at hand. In this context, the paper revisits Coalgebra from a computational perspective, focussing on three topics central to software design: how systems are modelled, how models are composed, and finally, how properties of their behaviours can be expressed and verified. © 2022, College Publications. All rights reserved.
2022
Autores
Cruz, A; Madeira, A; Barbosa, LS;
Publicação
ELECTRONIC PROCEEDINGS IN THEORETICAL COMPUTER SCIENCE
Abstract
Modelling complex information systems often entails the need for dealing with scenarios of inconsistency in which several requirements either reinforce or contradict each other. In this kind of scenarios, arising e.g. in knowledge representation, simulation of biological systems, or quantum computation, inconsistency has to be addressed in a precise and controlled way. This paper generalises Belnap-Dunn four-valued logic, introducing paraconsistent transition systems (PTS), endowed with positive and negative accessibility relations, and a metric space over the lattice of truth values, and their modal logic.
2022
Autores
Sequeira, A; Santos, LP; Barbosa, LS;
Publicação
CoRR
Abstract
2022
Autores
Southier, LFP; Casanova, D; Barbosa, L; Torrico, C; Barbosa, M; Teixeira, M;
Publicação
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PRODUCTION RESEARCH
Abstract
Finite-State Automata (FSA) are foundations for modelling, synthesis, verification, and implementation of controllers for manufacturing systems. However, FSA are limited to represent emerging features in manufacturing, such as the ability to recognise and switch contexts. One option is to enrich FSA with parameters that carry details about the manufacturing, which may favour design and control. A parameter can be embedded either on transitions or states of an FSA, and each approach defines its own modelling framework, so that their comparison and integration are not straightforward, and they may lead to different control solutions, modelled, processed and implemented distinctly. In this paper, we show how to combine advantages from parameters in manufacturing the modelling and control. We initially present a background that allows to understand each parameterisation strategy. Then, we introduce a conversion method that translates a design-friendly model into a synthesis-efficient structure. Finally, we use the converted models is synthesis, highlighting their advantages. Examples are used throughout the paper to illustrate and compare our results and tooling support is also provided.
2022
Autores
Weidner, M; Almeida, PS;
Publicação
PAPOC'22: PROCEEDINGS OF THE 9TH PRINCIPLES AND PRACTICE OF CONSISTENCY FOR DISTRIBUTED DATA
Abstract
Embedding CRDT counters has shown to be a challenging topic, since their introduction in Riak Maps. The desire for obliviousness, where all information about a counter is fully removed upon key removal, faces problems due to the possibility of concurrency between increments and key removals. Previous state-based proposals exhibit undesirable reset-wins semantics, which lead to losing increments, unsatisfactorily solved through manual generation management in the API. Previous operation-based approaches depend on causal stability, being prone to unbounded counter growth under network partitions. We introduce a novel embeddable operation-based CRDT counter which achieves both desirable observed-reset semantics and obliviousness upon resets. Moreover, it achieves this while merely requiring FIFO delivery, allowing a tradeoff between causal consistency and faster information propagation, being more robust under network partitions.
2022
Autores
Kassam, Z; Almeida, PS; Shoker, A;
Publicação
2022 31ST INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON COMPUTER COMMUNICATIONS AND NETWORKS (ICCCN 2022)
Abstract
TCP is typically the default transport protocol of choice for its supposed reliability, even for message-oriented middleware (e.g., ZeroMQ) or inter-actor communication (e.g., distributed Erlang). However, under network issues, TCP connections can fail, which requires ensuring both at-least-once and at-most-once delivery at the upper middleware layer. Moreover, the use of TCP at scale, in highly concurrent systems, can lead to drastic performance loss due to the need for TCP connection multiplexing and the resulting head-of-line blocking. This paper introduces Exon, an oblivious exactly-once messaging protocol, and a corresponding lightweight library implementation. Exon uses a novel strategy of a per-message four-way protocol to ensure oblivious exactly-once messaging, with on-demand protocol-level soft half-connections that are established when needed and safely discarded. This achieves correctness, obliviousness, and performance, through merging and pipelining basic protocol messages. The empirical evaluation of Exon demonstrates significant improvements in throughput and latency under packet loss, while maintaining a negligible overhead over TCP in healthy networks.
The access to the final selection minute is only available to applicants.
Please check the confirmation e-mail of your application to obtain the access code.