A calculus of mobile processes, I
Information and Computation
Handbook of Process Algebra
An Automated Based Verification Environment for Mobile Processes
TACAS '97 Proceedings of the Third International Workshop on Tools and Algorithms for Construction and Analysis of Systems
OPEN/CÆSAR: An OPen Software Architecture for Verification, Simulation, and Testing
TACAS '98 Proceedings of the 4th International Conference on Tools and Algorithms for Construction and Analysis of Systems
Model Checking Mobile Processes
CONCUR '93 Proceedings of the 4th International Conference on Concurrency Theory
Checking Bisimilarity for Finitary pi-Calculus
CONCUR '95 Proceedings of the 6th International Conference on Concurrency Theory
Compiler Construction Using LOTOS NT
CC '02 Proceedings of the 11th International Conference on Compiler Construction
The Mobility Workbench - A Tool for the pi-Calculus
CAV '94 Proceedings of the 6th International Conference on Computer Aided Verification
A Model Checking Language for Concurrent Value-Passing Systems
FM '08 Proceedings of the 15th international symposium on Formal Methods
Translating Pi-calculus into LOTOS NT
IFM'10 Proceedings of the 8th international conference on Integrated formal methods
CADP 2010: a toolbox for the construction and analysis of distributed processes
TACAS'11/ETAPS'11 Proceedings of the 17th international conference on Tools and algorithms for the construction and analysis of systems: part of the joint European conferences on theory and practice of software
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The π-calculus [12] was proposed by Milner, Parrow, and Walker about twenty years ago for describing concurrent systems with mobile communication. The π-calculus is equipped with operational semantics defined in terms of Ltss (Labelled Transition Systems). Although a lot of theoretical results have been achieved on this language (see, e.g., [1, chapter 8] for a survey), only a few verification tools have been designed for analysing π-calculus specifications automatically. The two most famous examples are the Mobility Workbench (Mwb) [14] and Jack [5], which were developed in the 90s.