eprintid: 2322 rev_number: 9 eprint_status: archive userid: 59 dir: disk0/00/00/23/22 datestamp: 2014-10-09 13:45:05 lastmod: 2015-04-08 10:37:32 status_changed: 2014-10-09 13:45:05 type: book_section metadata_visibility: show creators_name: Padovani, Luca creators_name: Vasconcelos, Vasco Thudichum creators_name: Torres Vieira, Hugo creators_id: creators_id: creators_id: hugo.torresvieira@imtlucca.it title: Typing liveness in multiparty communicating systems ispublished: pub subjects: QA75 divisions: CSA full_text_status: public note: Proceedings of the 16th IFIP WG 6.1 International Conference, COORDINATION 2014, Held as Part of the 9th International Federated Conferences on Distributed Computing Techniques, DisCoTec 2014, Berlin, Germany, June 3-5, 2014 abstract: Session type systems are an effective tool to prove that communicating programs do not go wrong, ensuring that the participants of a session follow the protocols described by the types. In a previous work we introduced a typing discipline for the analysis of progress in binary sessions. In this paper we generalize the approach to multiparty sessions following the conversation type approach, while strengthening progress to liveness. We combine the usual session-like fidelity analysis with the liveness analysis and devise an original treatment of recursive types allowing us to address challenging configurations that are out of the reach of existing approaches. date: 2014 series: Lecture Notes in Computer Science publisher: Springer pagerange: 147-162 id_number: 10.1007/978-3-662-43376-8_10 refereed: TRUE isbn: 978-3-662-43376-8 book_title: Coordination Models and Languages official_url: http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-662-43376-8_10 citation: Padovani, Luca and Vasconcelos, Vasco Thudichum and Torres Vieira, Hugo Typing liveness in multiparty communicating systems. In: Coordination Models and Languages. Lecture Notes in Computer Science . Springer, pp. 147-162. ISBN 978-3-662-43376-8 (2014) document_url: http://eprints.imtlucca.it/2322/1/TorresVieira_LNCS_2014.pdf