Debugging concurrent programs is an interesting application of reversibility. It has been renewed with the recent proposal by Giachino et al. to base the operations of a concurrent debugger on a causal-consistent reversible semantics, and subsequent work on CauDEr, a causal-consistent debugger for the Erlang programming language. This paper...
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July 7, 2021 (v1)Conference paperUploaded on: December 4, 2022
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June 9, 2023 (v1)Report
Distributed systems can be subject to various kinds of partial failures, and building fault-tolerance or failure mitigation mechanisms for distributed systems remains an important domain of research. In this paper, we present a calculus to formally model distributed systems subject to crash failures, and in which one can encode recovery...
Uploaded on: July 7, 2023 -
April 5, 2022 (v1)Report
In recent years, reversibility in concurrent settings has attracted interest thanks to its diverse applications in areas such as error recovery, debugging, and biological modeling. Also, it has been studied in many formalisms, including Petri nets, process algebras, and programming languages like Erlang. However, most attempts made so far...
Uploaded on: December 3, 2022 -
October 24, 2022 (v1)Conference paper
In recent years, reversibility in concurrent settings has attracted interest thanks to its diverse applications in areas such as error recovery, debugging, and biological modeling. Also, it has been studied in many formalisms, including Petri nets, process algebras, and programming languages like Erlang. However, most attempts made so far...
Uploaded on: February 22, 2023 -
July 5, 2022 (v1)Conference paper
A relevant application of reversibility is causal-consistent reversible debugging, which allows one to explore concurrent computations backward and forward to find a bug. This approach has been put into practice in CauDEr, a causal-consistent reversible debugger for the Erlang programming language. CauDEr supports the functional, concurrent and...
Uploaded on: February 22, 2023 -
July 5, 2022 (v1)Report
A relevant application of reversibility is causal-consistent reversible debugging, which allows one to explore concurrent computations backward and forward to find a bug. This approach has been put into practice in CauDEr, a causal-consistent reversible debugger for the Erlang programming language. CauDEr supports the functional, concurrent and...
Uploaded on: December 3, 2022