| Process Algebra: Open Problems and Future
Directions
July 21-25, 2003 |
|---|
We intend to maintain this page as up to date as possible, in the hope that it will be a useful resource for the practising process algebraist and concurrency theorist. To this end, we invite all of the members of the process algebra community to help us by sending the maintainer of this page suggestions for new problems to be posted here, and pointers to their solutions.
Some further open problems are mentioned in the note Some of My Favourite Results in Classic Process Algebra by Luca Aceto, and on the slides of the talks delivered at the workshop.
News posted on October 2, 2003. A negative solution to this problem has been obtained by Luca Aceto, Wan Fokkink, Anna Ingólfsdóttir and Bas Luttik. Full details are now available from this paper.
News posted on February 10, 2004.
Luca Aceto, Wan Fokkink, Anna Ingólfsdóttir and Bas Luttik have shown
that Hennessy's merge suffices to give a finite axiomatization of
split-2 bisimilarity (and in fact of each split-n
bisimilarity and ST bisimilarity over the restriction, relabelling and
recursion free fragment of CCS. Full details are now available from
this paper.
Work on settling the above question for standard bisimilarity is
ongoing. In that case, Hennessy's merge does not yield a finite
axiomatization of bisimilarity, and we conjecture that no single
binary operation does either.
See the note Some of My Favourite Results in Classic Process Algebra by Luca Aceto for further open problems.
(1) respects traces and deadlock behaviour (i.e. is finer than completed trace equivalence)
(2) is compositional for the standard process algebra operators (CCS, CSP)
(3) satisfies the Recursive Specification principle, saying that each system of guarded recursive equations has a unique solution.
When requiring merely (1) and (2) the answer is fair testing equivalence as studied in [BRV95]. The impossible futures equivalence, documented in [VM01], certainly satisfies all properties, but it is not known whether is the coarsest.
[BRV95] Ed Brinksma, Arend Rensink and Walter Vogler: Fair Testing.
CONCUR 1995: 313-327.
[VM01] Marc Voorhoeve
and Sjouke Mauw: Impossible
futures and determinism, Information Processing Letters 80(1):
51-58 (2001).
(1) respects lifeness, as explained in my Bertinoro talk,
(2) does not satisfy KFAR-like fairness assumptions,
(3) satisfies the Recursive Specification principle, saying that each
system of guarded recursive equations has a unique solution.
I'm not sure whether this problem needs a slight reformulation (such as extra requirements) upon further contemplation.
Luca Aceto, Institute for Computer Science, Aalborg University.Last modified: Monday, 15-Mar-2004 17:16:24 CET.