{"ec_funded":1,"conference":{"end_date":"2011-07-20","location":"Snowbird, USA","start_date":"2011-07-14","name":"CAV: Computer Aided Verification"},"citation":{"short":"P. Cerny, K. Chatterjee, T.A. Henzinger, A. Radhakrishna, R. Singh, in:, G. Gopalakrishnan, S. Qadeer (Eds.), Springer, 2011, pp. 243–259.","chicago":"Cerny, Pavol, Krishnendu Chatterjee, Thomas A Henzinger, Arjun Radhakrishna, and Rohit Singh. “Quantitative Synthesis for Concurrent Programs.” edited by Ganesh Gopalakrishnan and Shaz Qadeer, 6806:243–59. Springer, 2011. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-22110-1_20.","ista":"Cerny P, Chatterjee K, Henzinger TA, Radhakrishna A, Singh R. 2011. Quantitative synthesis for concurrent programs. CAV: Computer Aided Verification, LNCS, vol. 6806, 243–259.","apa":"Cerny, P., Chatterjee, K., Henzinger, T. A., Radhakrishna, A., & Singh, R. (2011). Quantitative synthesis for concurrent programs. In G. Gopalakrishnan & S. Qadeer (Eds.) (Vol. 6806, pp. 243–259). Presented at the CAV: Computer Aided Verification, Snowbird, USA: Springer. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-22110-1_20","ama":"Cerny P, Chatterjee K, Henzinger TA, Radhakrishna A, Singh R. Quantitative synthesis for concurrent programs. In: Gopalakrishnan G, Qadeer S, eds. Vol 6806. Springer; 2011:243-259. doi:10.1007/978-3-642-22110-1_20","ieee":"P. Cerny, K. Chatterjee, T. A. Henzinger, A. Radhakrishna, and R. Singh, “Quantitative synthesis for concurrent programs,” presented at the CAV: Computer Aided Verification, Snowbird, USA, 2011, vol. 6806, pp. 243–259.","mla":"Cerny, Pavol, et al. Quantitative Synthesis for Concurrent Programs. Edited by Ganesh Gopalakrishnan and Shaz Qadeer, vol. 6806, Springer, 2011, pp. 243–59, doi:10.1007/978-3-642-22110-1_20."},"editor":[{"last_name":"Gopalakrishnan","first_name":"Ganesh","full_name":"Gopalakrishnan, Ganesh"},{"last_name":"Qadeer","first_name":"Shaz","full_name":"Qadeer, Shaz"}],"pubrep_id":"76","language":[{"iso":"eng"}],"_id":"3366","page":"243 - 259","doi":"10.1007/978-3-642-22110-1_20","author":[{"full_name":"Cerny, Pavol","id":"4DCBEFFE-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87","first_name":"Pavol","last_name":"Cerny"},{"orcid":"0000-0002-4561-241X","first_name":"Krishnendu","last_name":"Chatterjee","full_name":"Chatterjee, Krishnendu","id":"2E5DCA20-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87"},{"first_name":"Thomas A","last_name":"Henzinger","full_name":"Henzinger, Thomas A","id":"40876CD8-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87","orcid":"0000−0002−2985−7724"},{"full_name":"Radhakrishna, Arjun","id":"3B51CAC4-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87","first_name":"Arjun","last_name":"Radhakrishna"},{"last_name":"Singh","first_name":"Rohit","full_name":"Singh, Rohit"}],"has_accepted_license":"1","file_date_updated":"2020-07-14T12:46:10Z","ddc":["000","004"],"project":[{"_id":"25EE3708-B435-11E9-9278-68D0E5697425","name":"Quantitative Reactive Modeling","grant_number":"267989","call_identifier":"FP7"},{"name":"Moderne Concurrency Paradigms","_id":"25F5A88A-B435-11E9-9278-68D0E5697425","grant_number":"S11402-N23","call_identifier":"FWF"},{"name":"Rigorous Systems Engineering","_id":"25832EC2-B435-11E9-9278-68D0E5697425","grant_number":"S 11407_N23","call_identifier":"FWF"},{"name":"Microsoft Research Faculty Fellowship","_id":"2587B514-B435-11E9-9278-68D0E5697425"},{"_id":"25F1337C-B435-11E9-9278-68D0E5697425","name":"Design for Embedded Systems","grant_number":"214373","call_identifier":"FP7"}],"intvolume":" 6806","publist_id":"3247","volume":6806,"year":"2011","publication_status":"published","date_published":"2011-04-21T00:00:00Z","department":[{"_id":"ToHe"},{"_id":"KrCh"}],"abstract":[{"text":"We present an algorithmic method for the quantitative, performance-aware synthesis of concurrent programs. The input consists of a nondeterministic partial program and of a parametric performance model. The nondeterminism allows the programmer to omit which (if any) synchronization construct is used at a particular program location. The performance model, specified as a weighted automaton, can capture system architectures by assigning different costs to actions such as locking, context switching, and memory and cache accesses. The quantitative synthesis problem is to automatically resolve the nondeterminism of the partial program so that both correctness is guaranteed and performance is optimal. As is standard for shared memory concurrency, correctness is formalized "specification free", in particular as race freedom or deadlock freedom. For worst-case (average-case) performance, we show that the problem can be reduced to 2-player graph games (with probabilistic transitions) with quantitative objectives. While we show, using game-theoretic methods, that the synthesis problem is Nexp-complete, we present an algorithmic method and an implementation that works efficiently for concurrent programs and performance models of practical interest. We have implemented a prototype tool and used it to synthesize finite-state concurrent programs that exhibit different programming patterns, for several performance models representing different architectures. ","lang":"eng"}],"file":[{"relation":"main_file","checksum":"c033689355f45742dc7c99b5af13ce7a","content_type":"application/pdf","file_name":"IST-2012-76-v1+1_Quantitative_synthesis_for_concurrent_programs.pdf","access_level":"open_access","creator":"system","date_updated":"2020-07-14T12:46:10Z","file_id":"5174","file_size":508946,"date_created":"2018-12-12T10:15:51Z"}],"type":"conference","day":"21","article_processing_charge":"No","month":"04","date_updated":"2023-02-23T12:24:01Z","quality_controlled":"1","title":"Quantitative synthesis for concurrent programs","related_material":{"record":[{"status":"public","id":"5388","relation":"earlier_version"}]},"status":"public","alternative_title":["LNCS"],"oa":1,"oa_version":"Submitted Version","user_id":"3E5EF7F0-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87","date_created":"2018-12-11T12:02:55Z","publisher":"Springer"}