Abstract
We develop new algebraic tools to reason about concurrent behaviours modelled
as languages of Mazurkiewicz traces and asynchronous automata. These tools
reflect the distributed nature of traces and the underlying causality and
concurrency between events, and can be said to support true concurrency. They
generalize the tools that have been so efficient in understanding, classifying
and reasoning about word languages. In particular, we introduce an asynchronous
version of the wreath product operation and we describe the trace languages
recognized by such products (the so-called asynchronous wreath product
principle). We then propose a decomposition result for recognizable trace
languages, analogous to the Krohn-Rhodes theorem, and we prove this
decomposition result in the special case of acyclic architectures. Finally, we
introduce and analyze two distributed automata-theoretic operations. One, the
local cascade product, is a direct implementation of the asynchronous wreath
product operation. The other, global cascade sequences, although conceptually
and operationally similar to the local cascade product, translates to a more
complex asynchronous implementation which uses the gossip automaton of Mukund
and Sohoni. This leads to interesting applications to the characterization of
trace languages definable in first-order logic: they are accepted by a
restricted local cascade product of the gossip automaton and 2-state
asynchronous reset automata, and also by a global cascade sequence of 2-state
asynchronous reset automata. Over distributed alphabets for which the
asynchronous Krohn-Rhodes theorem holds, a local cascade product of such
automata is sufficient and this, in turn, leads to the identification of a
simple temporal logic which is expressively complete for such alphabets.
Publisher
Centre pour la Communication Scientifique Directe (CCSD)
Subject
General Computer Science,Theoretical Computer Science
Cited by
1 articles.
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