From Programs to Systems. The Systems perspective in Computing ETAPS Workshop, FPS 2014, in Honor of Joseph Sifakis, Grenoble, France, April 6, 2014. Proceedings / [electronic resource] :
edited by Saddek Bensalem, Yassine Lakhneck, Axel Legay.
- XII, 279 p. 76 illus. online resource.
- Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 8415 0302-9743 ; .
- Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 8415 .
Model-Driven Information Flow Security for Component-Based Systems -- Context-Bounded Analysis of TSO Systems.- A Model of Dynamic Systems.- From Hierarchical BIP to Petri Calculus.- Programming and Verifying Component Ensembles.- Parametric and Quantitative Extensions of Modal Transition Systems -- Specification Theories for Probabilistic and Real-Time Systems.- Compositional Branching-Time Measurements.- Steps towards Scenario-Based Programming with a Natural Language Interface.- Assembly Theories for Communication-Safe Component Systems.- Constructive Collisions.- Let's Get Physical: Computer Science Meets Systems.- What Can be Computed in a Distributed System.- Toward a System Design Science.- OpenMETA: A Model- and Component-Based Design Tool Chain for Cyber-Physical Systems.- Feedback in Synchronous Relational Interfaces.- Reasoning about Network Topologies in Space. .
"From Programs to Systems - The Systems Perspective in Computing" workshop (FPS 2014) was held in honor of Professor Joseph Sifakis in the framework of the 16th European Joint Conferences on Theory and Practice of Software, ETAPS, in Grenoble, April 2014. Joseph Sifakis is an active and visionary researcher in the area of system design. He believes that endowing design with scientific foundations is at least of equal importance as the quest for scientific truth in natural sciences. Previously, he has worked on Petri nets, concurrent systems, program semantics, verification, embedded systems, real-time systems, and formal methods more generally. The book contains 18 papers covering various topics related to the extension of programming theory to systems.
9783642548482
10.1007/978-3-642-54848-2 doi
Computer science. Software engineering. Programming languages (Electronic computers). Computers. Computer logic. Mathematical logic. Computer Science. Logics and Meanings of Programs. Computation by Abstract Devices. Programming Languages, Compilers, Interpreters. Mathematical Logic and Formal Languages. Software Engineering.