Caltech Computer Science Technical Reports

Hierarchical Nets: A Structured Petri Net Approach to Concurrency

Choo, Young-il (1982) Hierarchical Nets: A Structured Petri Net Approach to Concurrency. Technical Report. California Institute of Technology. [CaltechCSTR:1982.5044-tr-82]

Full text available as:

Other (Adobe PDF (3.1MB))
Postscript - Requires a viewer, such as GhostView

Abstract

Liveness and safeness are two key properties Petri nets should have when they are used to model asynchronous systems. The analysis of liveness and safeness for general Petri nets, though shown to be decidable by Mayr [1981], is still computa- tionally expensive (Lipton [1976]1). In this paper an hierarchical approach is taken: a class of Petri nets is recursively defined starting with simple, live and safe struc- tures, becoming progressively more complex using net transformations designed to preserve liveness and safeness. Using simple net transformations, nice nets, which are live and safe, are defined. Their behavior is too restrictive for modeling non-trivial systems, so the mutual exclusion and the repetition constructs are added to get p-p-nets. Since the use of mutual exclusions can cause deadlock, and the use of repetitions can cause loss of safeness, restrictions for their use are given. Using u-p-nets as the building blocks, hierarchical nets are defined. When the mutual exclusion and repetition constructs are allowed between hierarchical nets, distributed hierarchical nets are obtained. Examples of distributed hierarchical nets used to solve synchronization problems are given. General net transformations not preserving liveness or safeness, and a notion of duality are presented, and their effect on Petri net behavior is considered.

EPrint Type:Monograph (Technical Report)
Subjects:All Records
ID Code:417
Deposited By:Caltech Library System
Deposited On:09 August 2002
Record Number:CaltechCSTR:1982.5044-tr-82
Official Persistent URL:http://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechCSTR:1982.5044-tr-82
Usage Policy:You are granted permission for individual, educational, research and non-commercial reproduction, distribution, display and performance of this work in any format.

Archive Staff Only: edit this record