Milner’s complete proof system for observational congruence is crucially based on the possibility to equate τ divergent expressions to non-divergent ones by means of the axiom recX.(τ.X + E) = recX.τ.E. In the presence of a notion of priority, where, e.g., actions of type δ have a lower priority than silent τ actions, this axiom is no longer sound. Such a form of priority is, however, common in timed process algebra, where, due to the interpretation of δ as a time delay, it naturally arises from the maximal progress assumption. We here present our solution, based on introducing an auxiliary operator pri(E) defining a “priority scope”, to the long time open problem of axiomatizing priority using standard observational congruence: we provide a complete axiomatization for a basic process algebra with priority and (unguarded) recursion. We also show that, when the setting is extended by considering static operators of a discrete time calculus, an axiomatization that is complete over (a characterization of) finite-state terms can be developed by re-using techniques devised in the context of a cooperation with Prof. Jos Baeten.

Axiomatizing maximal progress and discrete time

Bravetti M.
2021

Abstract

Milner’s complete proof system for observational congruence is crucially based on the possibility to equate τ divergent expressions to non-divergent ones by means of the axiom recX.(τ.X + E) = recX.τ.E. In the presence of a notion of priority, where, e.g., actions of type δ have a lower priority than silent τ actions, this axiom is no longer sound. Such a form of priority is, however, common in timed process algebra, where, due to the interpretation of δ as a time delay, it naturally arises from the maximal progress assumption. We here present our solution, based on introducing an auxiliary operator pri(E) defining a “priority scope”, to the long time open problem of axiomatizing priority using standard observational congruence: we provide a complete axiomatization for a basic process algebra with priority and (unguarded) recursion. We also show that, when the setting is extended by considering static operators of a discrete time calculus, an axiomatization that is complete over (a characterization of) finite-state terms can be developed by re-using techniques devised in the context of a cooperation with Prof. Jos Baeten.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11585/815638
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