Synchronous Programming of Reactive Systems

Synchronous Programming of Reactive Systems by Nicolas Halbwachs, published by Springer US on December 7, 2010, is a softcover reprint of the original hardcover edition from 1993, comprising 174 pages. This book presents a synthesis of recent developments in the design of reactive systems, a term introduced to clarify the ambiguities associated with “real-time systems.” It explores various applications, including industrial process control, transportation control, and signal-processing systems, highlighting the increasing relevance of time in computer science.
Readers will find a detailed examination of how the handling of time has evolved into a critical aspect of concurrency models. The book discusses the historical context of time-related issues in computer science and the recent surge in research focused on timed systems. By addressing the instantaneous reaction of systems to events, this work contributes to the understanding of synchronous process algebras and their implications for computer science and information technology.
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This book will attempt to give a first synthesis of recent works con cerning reactive system design. The term “reactive system” has been introduced in order to at’oid the ambiguities often associated with by the term “real-time system,” which, although best known and more sugges tive, has been given so many different meanings that it is almost in evitably misunderstood. Industrial process control systems, transporta tion control and supervision systems, signal-processing systems, are ex amples of the systems we have in mind. Although these systems are more and more computerized, it is sur prising to notice that the problem of time in computer science has been studied only recently by “pure” computer scientists. Until the early 1980s, time problems were regarded as the concern of performance evalu ation, or of some (unjustly scorned) “industrial computer engineering,” or, at best, of operating systems. A second surprising fact, in contrast, is the growth of research con cerning timed systems during the last decade. The handling of time has suddenly become a fundamental goal for most models of concurrency. In particular, Robin Alilner ‘s pioneering works about synchronous process algebras gave rise to a school of thought adopting the following abstract point of view: As soon as one admits that a system can instantaneously react to events, i. e.
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