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Zimmerman, Daniel M. (2001-07-27) Dynamic UNITY. http://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-12072001-160019


Type of Document Dissertation
Author Zimmerman, Daniel M.
Author's Email Address dmz AT cs.caltech.edu
URN etd-12072001-160019
Persistent URL http://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-12072001-160019
Title Dynamic UNITY
Degree PhD
Option Computer Science
Advisory Committee
Advisor Name Title
K. Mani Chandy Committee Chair
Alain Martin Committee Member
Jason Hickey Committee Member
Jehoshua Bruck Committee Member
Keywords
  • program specification
  • UNITY
  • distributed computing
  • transition systems
  • formal methods
Date of Defense 2001-07-27
Availability unrestricted
Abstract
Dynamic distributed systems, where a changing set of communicating processes must interoperate to accomplish particular computational tasks, are becoming extremely important. Designing and implementing these systems, and verifying the correctness of the designs and implementations, are difficult tasks. The goal of this thesis is to make these tasks easier.

This thesis presents a specification language for dynamic distributed systems, based on Chandy and Misra's UNITY language. It extends the UNITY language to enable process creation, process deletion, and dynamic communication patterns.

The thesis defines an execution model for systems specified in this language, which leads to a proof logic similar to that of UNITY. While extending UNITY logic to correctly handle systems with dynamic behavior, this logic retains the familiar UNITY operators and most of the proof rules associated with them.

The thesis presents specifications for three example dynamic distributed systems to demonstrate the use of the specification language, and full correctness proofs for two of these systems and a partial correctness proof for the third to demonstrate the use of the proof logic.

The thesis details a method for determining whether a system in the specification language can be transformed into an implementation in a standard programming language, as well as a method for performing this transformation on those specifications that can. This guarantees a correct implementation for any specification that can be so transformed.

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