Abstract

The classical algebraic approach to graph transformation is a mathematical theory based on categorical techniques with several interesting applications in computer science. In this paper, a new semantics of graph transformation systems (in the algebraic, double-pushout (DPO) approach) is proposed in order to make them suitable for the specification of concurrent and reactive systems. Classically, a graph transformation system comes with a fixed behavioral interpretation. Firstly, all transformation steps are intended to be completely specified by the rules of the system, that is, there is an implicit frame condition: it is assumed that there is a complete control about the evolution of the system. Hence, the interaction between the system and its (possibly unknown) environment, which is essential in a reactive system, cannot be modeled explicitly. Secondly, each sequence of transformation steps represents a legal computation of the system, and this makes it difficult to model systems with control. The first issue is addressed by providing graph transformation rules with a loose semantics, allowing for unspecified effects which are interpreted as activities of the environment. This is formalized by the notion of double-pullback transitions, which replace (and generalize) the well-known double-pushout diagrams by allowing for spontaneous changes in the context of a rule application. Two characterizations of double-pullback transitions are provided: the first one describes them in terms of extended direct DPO derivations, and the second one as incomplete views of parallel or amalgamated derivations. The issue of constraining the behavior of a system to transformation sequences satisfying certain properties is addressed instead by introducing a general notion of logic of behavioral constraints, which includes instances like start graphs, application and consistency conditions, and temporal logic constraints. The loose semantics of a system with restricted behavior is defined as a category of coalgebras over a suitable functor. Such category has a final object which includes all finite and infinite transition sequences satisfying the constraints.

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