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Using Message Passing for Distributed Programming: Proof Rules and Disciplines

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Abstract

Inference rules are derived for proving partial correctness of concurrent programs that use message passing. These rules extend the notion of a satisfaction proof, first proposed for proving correctness of programs that use synchronous message-passing, to asynchronous message-passing, rendezvous, and remote procedures. Two types of asynchronous message-passing are considered: unreliable datagrams and reliable virtual circuits. The proof rules show how interference can arise and be controlled.

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1982-05

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Cornell University

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computer science; technical report

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http://techreports.library.cornell.edu:8081/Dienst/UI/1.0/Display/cul.cs/TR82-491

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technical report

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