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arxiv: 1505.05964 · v1 · pith:IPVYE6DUnew · submitted 2015-05-22 · 💻 cs.LO

CCS: It's not Fair! Fair Schedulers cannot be implemented in CCS-like languages even under progress and certain fairness assumptions

classification 💻 cs.LO
keywords fairfairnessassumptioncannotcorrectlydistributedexpressedfollows
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In the process algebra community it is sometimes suggested that, on some level of abstraction, any distributed system can be modelled in standard process-algebraic specification formalisms like CCS. This sentiment is strengthened by results testifying that CCS, like many similar formalisms, is Turing powerful and provides a mechanism for interaction. This paper counters that sentiment by presenting a simple fair scheduler---one that in suitable variations occurs in many distributed systems---of which no implementation can be expressed in CCS, unless CCS is enriched with a fairness assumption. Since Dekker's and Peterson's mutual exclusion protocols implement fair schedulers, it follows that these protocols cannot be rendered correctly in CCS without imposing a fairness assumption. Peterson expressed this algorithm correctly in pseudocode without resorting to a fairness assumption, so it furthermore follows that CCS lacks the expressive power to accurately capture such pseudocode.

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