Projects details

  • BETTY - behavioural types for reliable large-scale software systems
  • Oct 2012 - Oct 2016
  • Modern society is increasingly dependent on large-scale software systems that are distributed, collaborative and communication-centred. Correctness and reliability of such systems depend on compatibility between components and services that are newly developed or may already exist. The consequences of failure are severe, including security breaches and unavailability of essential services. Current software development technology is not well suited to producing these large-scale systems, because of the lack of high-level structuring abstractions for complex communication behaviour. This Action will use behavioural type theory as the basis for new foundations, programming languages, and software development methods for communication-intensive distributed systems. Behavioural type theory encompasses concepts such as interfaces, communication protocols, contracts, and choreography. As a unifying structural principle it will transform the theory and practice of distributed software development. The significance of behavioural types has been recognised world-wide during the last five years. European researchers are internationally leading. There is an urgent need for European co-ordination to avoid duplication of effort, facilitate interactions among research groups, and ensure that the field proceeds efficiently from academic research to industrial practice. This Action will provide the co-ordination layer and leverage the efforts of European researchers, to increase the competitiveness of the European software industry. See web site.
  • PI
  • University of Glasgow
  • European Union
  • 26 Oct 2012
  • 26 Oct 2016
  • António Ravara [Coordinator], Luis Caires [Researcher], João Costa Seco [Researcher], Carla Ferreira [Researcher], Marco Giunti [Researcher], Bernardo Toninho [Researcher]
  • INRIA
  • Imperial College London
  • IMT Institute for Advanced Studies Lucca
  • http://www.operationalsemantics.net/behaviouralwiki/doku.php?id=start