Actor model
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In computer science, the Actor model is a mathematical model of concurrent computation that treats "actors" as the universal primitives of concurrent digital computation: in response to a message that it receives, an actor can make local decisions, create more actors, send more messages, and determine how to respond to the next message received. The Actor model originates in a 1973 paper by Carl Hewitt, Peter Bishop, and Richard Steiger.[1] It has been used both as a framework for a theoretical understanding of concurrency, and as the theoretical basis for several practical implementations of concurrent systems. The relationship of the model to other work is discussed in Indeterminacy in concurrent computation and Actor model and process calculi.
[edit] History
Unlike previous models of computation, the Actor model was inspired by physical laws. It was also influenced by the programming languages Lisp, Simula and early versions of Smalltalk, as well as capability-based systems and packet switching. Its development was "motivated by the prospect of highly parallel computing machines consisting of dozens, hundreds or even thousands of independent microprocesors, each with its own local memory and communications processor, communicating via a high-performance communications network."[2] Later the motivation included the prospect of massive concurrency due to the advent of Web Services and many-core computer architecture.
Following Hewitt's 1973 publication, Irene Greif developed an operational semantics for the Actors model as part of her doctoral research.[3] Two years later, Henry Baker and Hewitt published a set of axiomatic laws for Actor systems.[4] Other major milestones include William Clinger's dissertation, in 1981, introducing an Actor model denotational semantics based on power domains,[2] and Gul Agha's 1985 dissertation which further developed a transition-based semantic model complementary to Clinger's.[5] This resulted in the full development of actor model theory.
Major software implementation work was done by Russ Atkinson, Beppe Attardi, Henry Baker, Gerry Barber, Peter Bishop, Peter de Jong, Ken Kahn, Henry Lieberman, Carl Manning, Tom Reinhardt, Richard Steiger, and Dan Theriault, in the Message Passing Semantics Group at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). Research groups led by Chuck Seitz at California Institute of Technology (Caltech) and Bill Dally at MIT constructed computer architectures that further developed the message passing in the model. See Actor model implementation.
Research on the Actor model has been carried out at Caltech Computer Science, Kyoto University Tokoro Laboratory, MCC, MIT Artificial Intelligence Laboratory, SRI, Stanford University, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Open Systems Laboratory, University of Paris 6, University of Pisa, University of Tokyo Yonezawa Laboratory and elsewhere.
[edit] Fundamental concepts
The Actor model adopts the philosophy that everything is an actor. This is similar to the everything is an object philosophy used by some object-oriented programming languages, but differs in that object-oriented software is typically executed sequentially, while the Actor model is inherently concurrent.
An actor is a computational entity that, in response to a message it receives, can concurrently:
- send a finite number of messages to other actors;
- create a finite number of new actors;
- designate the behavior to be used for the next message it receives.
There is no assumed sequence to above actions and they could be carried out in parallel.
Communications among actors occur asynchronously: that is, the sending actor does not wait until the message is received before proceeding with computation.
Recipients of messages are identified by address, sometimes called "mailing address". Thus an actor can only communicate with actors whose addresses it has. It can obtain those from a message it receives, or if the address is for an actor it just created.
The Actor model is characterized by inherent concurrency of computation within and among actors, dynamic creation of actors, inclusion of actor addresses in messages, and interaction only through direct asynchronous message passing with no restriction on message arrival order .
[edit] Formal systems
Over the years, several different formal systems have been developed which permit reasoning about systems in the Actor model. These include:
- Operational semantics[3][6]
- Laws for Actor systems[4]
- Denotational semantics[2][7]
- Transition semantics[5]
There are also formalisms that are not fully faithful to the Actor model in that they do not formalize the guaranteed delivery of messages including the following:
[edit] Applications
The Actors model can be used as a framework for modelling, understanding, and reasoning about, a wide range of concurrent systems. For example:
- Electronic mail can be modeled as an Actor system. Accounts are modeled as Actors and email addresses as Actor addresses.
- Web Services can be modeled with SOAP endpoints modeled as Actor addresses.
- Objects with locks (e.g. as in Java and C#) can be modeled as a Serializer, provided that their implementations are such that messages can continually arrive (perhaps by being stored in an internal queue). A serializer is an important kind of Actor defined by the property that it is continually available to the arrival of new messages; every message sent to a serializer is guaranteed to arrive.
- Testing and Test Control Notation (TTCN), both TTCN-2 and TTCN-3, follows Actor model rather closely. In TTCN, Actor is a test component: either parallel test component (PTC) or main test component (MTC). Test components can send and receive messages to and from remote partners (peer test components or test system interface), the latter being identified by its address. Each test component has a behaviour tree bound to it; test components run in parallel and can be dynamically created by parent test components. Builtin language constructs allow to define actions to be taken when an expected message is received from the internal message queue, like sending a message to another peer entity or creating new test components.
[edit] Models prior to the Actor model
The Actor model built on previous models of computation.
[edit] Lambda calculus
The lambda calculus of Alonzo Church can be viewed as the earliest message passing programming language. For example the lambda expression below implements a tree data structure when supplied with parameters for a leftSubTree and rightSubTree. When such a tree is given a parameter message "getLeft", it returns leftSubTree and likewise when given the message "getRight" it returns rightSubTree.
λ(leftSubTree,rightSubTree) λ(message) if (message == "getLeft") then leftSubTree else if (message == "getRight") then rightSubTree
However, the semantics of the lambda calculus were expressed using variable substitution in which the values of parameters were substituted into the body of an invoked lambda expression. The substitution model is unsuitable for concurrency because it does not allow the capability of sharing of changing resources. Inspired by the lambda calculus, the interpreter for the programming language Lisp made use of a data structure called an environment so that the values of parameters did not have to be substituted into the body of an invoked lambda expression. This allowed for sharing of the effects of updating shared data structures but did not provide for concurrency.
[edit] Sutherland's actor-oriented framework
In Bert Sutherland's 1966 Ph.D. thesis, The On-line Graphical Specification of Computer Procedures[12], Sutherland used the first acknowledged object oriented framework (Sketchpad, created by his brother, Ivan Sutherland) to create the first actor-oriented programming framework.
[edit] Simula
Simula 67 pioneered using message passing for computation, motivated by discrete event simulation applications. These applications had become large and unmodular in previous simulation languages. At each time step, a large central program would have to go through and update the state of each simulation object that changed depending on the state of which ever simulation objects that it interacted with on that step. Kristen Nygaard and Ole-Johan Dahl developed the idea (first described in an IFIP workshop in 1967) of having methods on each object that would update its own local state based on messages from other objects. In addition they introduced a class structure for objects with inheritance. Their innovations considerably improved the modularity of programs.
However, Simula used coroutine control structure instead of true concurrency.
[edit] Smalltalk
Alan Kay was influenced by message passing in the pattern-directed invocation of Planner in developing Smalltalk-71. Hewitt was intrigued by Smalltalk-71 but was put off by the complexity of communication that included invocations with many fields including global, sender, receiver, reply-style, status, reply, operator selector, etc.
In 1972 Kay visited MIT and discussed some of his ideas for Smalltalk-72 building on the Logo work of Seymour Papert and the "little person" model of computation used for teaching children to program. However, the message passing of Smalltalk-72 was quite complex. Code in the language was viewed by the interpreter as simply a stream of tokens. As Dan Ingalls later described it:
- The first (token) encountered (in a program) was looked up in the dynamic context, to determine the receiver of the subsequent message. The name lookup began with the class dictionary of the current activation. Failing there, it moved to the sender of that activation and so on up the sender chain. When a binding was finally found for the token, its value became the receiver of a new message, and the interpreter activated the code for that object's class.
This led some to believe that a new mathematical model of concurrent computation based on message passing should be simpler than Smalltalk-72.
Subsequent versions of the Smalltalk language largely followed the path of using the virtual methods of Simula in the message passing structure of programs. However Smalltalk-72 made primitives such as integers, floating point numbers, etc. into objects. The authors of Simula had considered making such primitives into objects but refrained largely for efficiency reasons. Java at first used the expedient of having both primitive and object versions of integers, floating point numbers, etc. The C# programming language (and later versions of Java, starting with Java 1.5) adopted the more elegant solution of using boxing and unboxing, a variant of which had been used earlier in some Lisp implementations.
The Smalltalk system went on to become very influential, innovating in bitmap displays, personal computing, the class browser interface, and many other ways. For details see Kay's The Early History of Smalltalk (ref below). Meanwhile the Actor efforts at MIT remained focused on developing the science and engineering of higher level concurrency. (See the paper by Jean-Pierre Briot for ideas that were developed later on how to incorporate some kinds of Actor concurrency into later versions of Smalltalk.)
[edit] Petri nets
Prior to the development of the Actor model, Petri nets were widely used to model concurrent computation. However, they were widely acknowledged to have an important limitation: they modeled control flow but not data flow. Consequently they were not readily composable thereby limiting their modularity. Hewitt pointed out another difficulty with Petri nets: simultaneous action. I.e., the atomic step of computation in Petri nets is a transition in which tokens simultaneously disappear from the input places of a transition and appear in the output places. The physical basis of using a primitive with this kind of simultaneity seemed questionable to him. Despite these apparent difficulties, Petri nets continue to be a popular approach to modelling concurrency, and are still the subject of active research.
[edit] Message-passing semantics
The Actor model is about the semantics of message passing.
[edit] Unbounded nondeterminism controversy
Arguably, the first concurrent programs were interrupt handlers. During the course of its normal operation, a computer needed to be able to receive information from outside (characters from a keyboard, packets from a network, etc.). So when the information arrived execution of the computer was "interrupted" and special code called an interrupt handler was called to put the information in a buffer where it could be subsequently gotten.
This was the beginning of development of the Communicating Sequential Processes paradigm in which concurrent programs were the parallel composition of sequential programs that communicated synchronously using buffers. Having parallelism with shared memory gave rise to the problem of concurrency control. Originally this problem was conceived as being one of mutual exclusion on a single computer. First Edsger Dijkstra developed semaphores and then between 1971 and 1973[13] Tony Hoare[14] and Per Brinch Hansen[15] developed monitors to solve the mutual exclusion problem. However, neither of these solutions provided a programming language construct that encapsulated access to shared resources. This encapsulation was later accomplished by the serializer construct ([Hewitt and Atkinson 1977, 1979] and [Atkinson 1980]). Tony Hoare carried on to develop his second version of CSP, described in [16].
The first models of computation (e.g. Turing machines, Post productions, the lambda calculus, etc.) were based on mathematics and made use of a global state to represent a computational step. Each computational step was from one global state of the computation to the next global state. The global state approach was continued in automata theory for finite state machines and push down stack machines, including their nondeterministic versions. Such nondeterministic automata have the property of bounded nondeterminism; that is, if a machine always halts when started in its initial state, then there is a bound on the number of states in which it halts.
Edsger Dijkstra further developed the nondeterministic global state approach. Dijkstra's model gave rise to a controversy concerning unbounded nondeterminism. Unbounded nondeterminism (also called unbounded indeterminacy, a title preferred by Hewitt following Niels Bohr), is a property of concurrency by which the amount of delay in servicing a request can become unbounded as a result of arbitration of contention for shared resources while still guaranteeing that the request will eventually be serviced. Hewitt argued that the Actor model should provide the guarantee of service. In Dijkstra's model, although there could be an unbounded amount of time between the execution of sequential instructions on a computer, a (parallel) program that started out in a well defined state could terminate in only a bounded number of states [Dijkstra 1976]. Consequently, his model could not provide the guarantee of service. Dijkstra argued that it was impossible to implement unbounded nondeterminism.
Hewitt argued otherwise: there is no bound that can be placed on how long it takes a computational circuit called an arbiter to settle (see metastability in electronics). Arbiters are used in computers to deal with the circumstance that computer clocks operate asynchronously with input from outside, e.g. keyboard input, disk access, network input, etc. So it could take an unbounded time for a message sent to a computer to be received and in the meantime the computer could traverse an unbounded number of states.
The Actor Model features unbounded nondeterminism which was captured in a mathematical model by Will Clinger using domain theory.[2] There is no global state in the Actor model.
[edit] Direct communication and asynchrony
Messages in the Actor model are not necessarily buffered. This was a sharp break with previous approaches to models of concurrent computation. The lack of buffering caused a great deal of misunderstanding at the time of the development of the Actor model and is still a controversial issue. Some researchers argued that the messages are buffered in the "ether" or the "environment". However, the "ether" doesn't make a very good buffer. Messages put in the Ether don't stay until they are gotten! Also, messages in the Actor model are simply sent (like packets in IP); there is no requirement for a synchronous handshake with the recipient.
[edit] Actor creation plus addresses in messages means variable topology
A natural development of the Actor model was to allow addresses in messages. Influenced by packet switched networks [1961 and 1964], Hewitt proposed the development of a new model of concurrent computation in which communications would not have any required fields at all: they could be empty. Of course, if the sender of a communication desired a recipient to have access to addresses which the recipient did not already have, the address would have to be sent in the communication.
A computation might need to send a message to a recipient from which it would later receive a response. The way to do this is to send a communication which has the message along with the address of another actor called the resumption (sometimes also called continuation or stack frame) along with the message. The recipient could then cause a response message to be sent to the resumption.
Actor creation plus the inclusion of the addresses of actors in messages means that Actors have a potentially variable topology in their relationship to one another much as the objects in Simula also had a variable topology in their relationship to one another.
[edit] Inherently concurrent
As opposed to the previous approach based on composing sequential processes, the Actor model was developed as an inherently concurrent model. In the Actor model sequentiality was a special case that derived from concurrent computation as explained in Actor model theory.
[edit] No requirement on order of message arrival
Hewitt argued against adding the requirement that messages must arrive in the order in which they are sent to the Actor model. If output message ordering is desired then it can be modeled by a queue Actor that provides this functionality. Such a queue Actor would queue the messages that arrived so that they could be retrieved in FIFO order. So if an Actor X sent a message M1 to an Actor Y and in response to a subsequent message that X received, it sent another message M2 to Y, there is no requirement that M1 arrives at Y before M2.
In this respect the Actor model mirrors packet switching systems which do not guarantee that packets must be received in the order sent. Not providing the order of delivery guarantee allows packet switching to buffer packets, use multiple paths to send packets, resend damaged packets, and to provide other optimizations.
For example, Actors are allowed to pipeline the processing of messages. What this means is that in the course of processing a message M1, an Actor can designate the behavior to be used to process the next message, and then in fact begin processing another message M2 before it has finished processing M1. Just because an Actor is allowed to pipeline the processing of messages does not mean that it must pipeline the processing. Whether a message is pipelined is an engineering tradeoff. How would an external observer know whether the processing of a message by an Actor has been pipelined? There is no ambiguity in the definition of an Actor created by the possibility of pipelining. Of course, it is possible to perform the pipeline optimization incorrectly in some implementations, in which case unexpected behavior may occur.
[edit] Not sequentiality, not buffering, not synchrony and not fixed topology
Robin Milner's [1973] initial published work on concurrency was also notable in that it was not based on composing sequential processes. His work differed from the Actor model because it was based on a fixed number of processes of fixed topology communicating using synchronous buffered communication. The original Communicating Sequential Processes model published by Tony Hoare [1978] differed from the Actor model because it was based on the parallel composition of a fixed number of sequential processes of fixed topology communicating using synchronous buffered communication.
These early models by Milner and Hoare both had the property of bounded nondeterminism. Modern, theoretical CSP ([Hoare 1985] and [Roscoe 2005]) explicitly provides unbounded nondeterminism.
[edit] Locality
Another important characteristic of the Actor model is locality.
Locality means that in processing a message: an Actor can send messages only to addresses that it receives in the message, addresses that it already had before it received the message and addresses for Actors that it creates while processing the message. (But see Synthesizing Addresses of Actors.)
Also locality means that there is no simultaneous change in multiple locations. In this way it differs from some other models of concurrency, e.g., the Petri net model in which tokens are simultaneously removed from multiple locations and placed in other locations.
[edit] Compositionality
Compositionality, i.e., the ability to compose Actor systems into larger ones, is an important aspect of modularity that was developed in Gul Agha's doctoral dissertation,[5] and later by Gul Agha, Ian Mason, Scott Smith, and Carolyn Talcott.[6]
[edit] Behaviors
A key innovation was the introduction of behavior specified as a mathematical function to express what an Actor does when it processes a message including specifying a new behavior to process the next message that arrives. Behaviors provided a mechanism to mathematically model the sharing in concurrency.
Behaviors also freed the Actor model from implementation details, e.g., the Smalltalk-72 token stream interpreter. However, it is critical to understand that the efficient implementation of systems described by the Actor model require extensive optimization. See Actor model implementation for details.
[edit] Relationship to mathematical logic
The development of the Actor model has an interesting relationship to mathematical logic. One of the key motivations for its development was to understand and deal with the control structure issues that arose in development of the Planner programming language. Once the Actor model was initially defined, an important challenge was to understand the power of the model relative to Kowalski's thesis that "computation can be subsumed by deduction". Kowalski's thesis turned out to be false for the concurrent computation in the Actor model (see Indeterminacy in concurrent computation). This result is still somewhat controversial and it reversed previous expectations because Kowalski's thesis is true for sequential computation and even some kinds of parallel computation, e.g. the lambda calculus.
Nevertheless attempts were made to extend logic programming to concurrent computation. However, Hewitt and Agha [1991] claimed that the resulting systems were not deductive in the following sense: computational steps of the concurrent logic programming systems do not follow deductively from previous steps (see Indeterminacy in concurrent computation).
[edit] Migration
Migration in the Actor model is the ability of Actors to change locations. E.g., in his dissertation, Aki Yonezawa modeled a post office that customer Actors could enter, change locations within while operating, and exit. An Actor that can migrate can be modeled by having a location Actor that changes when the Actor migrates. However the faithfulness of this modeling is controversial and the subject of research.
[edit] Security
The security of Actors can be protected in the following ways:
- hardwiring in which Actors are physically connected
- hardware as in Burroughs B5000, Lisp machine, etc.
- virtual machines as in Java virtual machine, Common Language Runtime, etc.
- operating systems as in capability-based systems
- signing and/or encryption of Actors and their addresses
[edit] Synthesizing addresses of actors
A delicate point in the Actor model is the ability to synthesize the address of an Actor. In some cases security can be used to prevent the synthesis of addresses (see Security). However, if an Actor address is simply a bit string then clearly it can be synthesized although it may be difficult or even impossible to guess the address of an Actor if the bit strings are long enough. SOAP uses a URL for the address of an endpoint where an Actor can be reached. Since a URL is a character string, it can clearly be synthesized although encryption can make it impossible to guess.
Synthesizing the addresses of Actors is usually modeled using mapping. The idea is to use an Actor system to perform the mapping to the actual Actor addresses. For example, on a computer the memory structure of the computer can be modeled as an Actor system that does the mapping. In the case of SOAP addresses, it's modeling the DNS and rest of the URL mapping.
[edit] Current importance
40 years after the publication of Moore's Law, hardware development is furthering local and nonlocal massive concurrency. Local concurrency is enabled by new hardware for 64-bit multi-core (Platform 2015 Unveiled at IDF Spring 2005) microprocessors, multi-chip modules, and high performance interconnect. Nonlocal concurrency is being enabled by new hardware for wired and wireless broadband packet switched communications (see Wi-Fi and Ultra wideband). Both local and nonlocal storage capacities are growing exponentially.
According to Hewitt [2006], the Actor model faces issues in computer and communications architecture, concurrent programming languages, and Web Services including the following:
- scalability: the challenge of scaling up concurrency both locally and nonlocally.
- transparency: bridging the chasm between local and nonlocal concurrency. Transparency is currently a controversial issue. Some researchers have advocated a strict separation between local concurrency using concurrent programming languages (e.g. Java and C#) from nonlocal concurrency using SOAP for Web services. Strict separation produces a lack of transparency that causes problems when it is desirable/necessary to change between local and nonlocal access to Web Services (see distributed computing). Bridging the chasm may require making binary XML (including XSD) first-class data types in Java and C# (see XLINQ).
- inconsistency: Inconsistency is the norm because all very large knowledge systems about human information system interactions are inconsistent. This inconsistency extends to the documentation and specifications of very large systems (e.g. Microsoft Windows software, etc.), which are internally inconsistent.
Many of the ideas introduced in the Actor model are now also finding application in multi-agent systems for these same reasons[citation needed]. The key difference is that agent systems (in most definitions) impose extra constraints upon the Actors, requiring that they are proactive and autonomous (typically, that they have goal representation and internal resource allocation mechanisms).
[edit] Actor researchers
Important contributions to the semantics of Actors have been made by: Gul Agha, Beppe Attardi, Henry Baker, Will Clinger, Irene Grief, Carl Manning, Ian Mason, Ugo Montanari, Maria Simi, Scott Smith, Carolyn Talcott, Prasanna Thati, and Aki Yonezawa.
Important contributions to the implementation of Actors have been made by: Bill Athas, Russ Atkinson, Beppe Attardi, Henry Baker, Gerry Barber, Peter Bishop, Nanette Boden, Jean-Pierre Briot, Bill Dally, Peter de Jong, Jessie Dedecker, Ken Kahn, Henry Lieberman, Carl Manning, Tom Reinhardt, Chuck Seitz, Richard Steiger, Dan Theriault, Mario Tokoro, Darrell Woelk, and Carlos Varela.
[edit] See also
- Data flow
- General relativity and Quantum physics, for some physical motivation for the Actor model theory
- Multi-agent system
- Neural networks
- Scientific Community Metaphor
[edit] Languages
Languages employing the actor model:
[edit] References
- ^ Carl Hewitt (1973). "A Universal Modular Actor Formalism for Artificial Intelligence". IJCAI.
- ^ a b c d William Clinger (June 1981). "Foundations of Actor Semantics". Mathematics Doctoral Dissertation. MIT.
- ^ a b Irene Greif (August 1975). "Semantics of Communicating Parallel Processes". EECS Doctoral Dissertation. MIT.
- ^ a b Henry Baker (August 1977). "Laws for Communicating Parallel Processes". IFIP.
- ^ a b c Gul Agha (1986). "Actors: A Model of Concurrent Computation in Distributed Systems". Doctoral Dissertation. MIT Press.
- ^ a b Gul Agha; Ian Mason, Scott Smith, and Carolyn Talcott (January 1993). "A Foundation for Actor Computation". Journal of Functional Programming.
- ^ Carl Hewitt (April 27, 2006). "What is Commitment? Physical, Organizational, and Social". COIN@AAMAS.
- ^ Mauro Gaspari (May 1997). "An Algebra of Actors". Technical Report UBLCS-97-4. University of Bologna.
- ^ M. Gaspari (1999). "An Algebra of Actors". Formal Methods for Open Object Based Systems.
- ^ Gul Agha (2004). "An Algebraic Theory of Actors and Its Application to a Simple Object-Based Language". From OO to FM (Dahl Festschrift) LNCS 2635.
- ^ John Darlington (1994). "Formalizing Actors in Linear Logic". International Conference on Object-Oriented Information Systems.
- ^ W.R. Sutherland (1966). "The On-line Graphical Specification of Computer Procedures". MIT.
- ^ Monitors and Concurrent Pascal: A Personal History, Per Brinch Hansen, Comm. ACM 1996, pp 121-172
- ^ Monitors: An Operating System Structuring Concept, Comm. ACM Vol. 17, No. 10. October 1974, pp. 549-557
- ^ Operating System Principles, Brinch Hansen, P., Prentice-Hall, July 1973.
- ^ Communicating Sequential Processes, C. A. R. Hoare, Prentice-Hall, 1985
[edit] Further reading
- Paul Baran. On Distributed Communications Networks IEEE Transactions on Communications Systems. March 1964.
- Peter Landin. A Generalization of Jumps and Labels Report. UNIVAC Systems Programming Research. August 1965. Reprinted in Higher Order and Symbolic Computation. 1998.
- Edsger Dijkstra Solution of a Problem in Concurrent Programming Control CACM. 1965.
- Jack Dennis and Earl Van Horn. Programming Semantics for Multiprogrammed Computations CACM. March 1966.
- Ole-Johan Dahl and Kristen Nygaard. Class and subclass declarations IFIP TC2 Conference on Simulation Programming Languages. May 1967.
- Carl Hewitt. PLANNER: A Language for Proving Theorems in Robots IJCAI 1969
- William A. Woods. Transition network grammars for natural language analysis CACM. 1970.
- Terry Winograd. Procedures as a Representation for Data in a Computer Program for Understanding Natural Language MIT AI TR-235. January 1971.
- Carl Hewitt. Procedural Embedding of Knowledge In Planner IJCAI 1971.
- G.M. Birtwistle, Ole-Johan Dahl, B. Myhrhaug and Kristen Nygaard. SIMULA Begin Auerbach Publishers Inc, 1973.
- Daniel Bobrow: A Model for Control Structures for Artificial Intelligence Programming Languages IJCAI 1973.
- Robin Milner. Processes: A Mathematical Model of Computing Agents in Logic Colloquium 1973.
- Carl Hewitt, et. al. Actor Induction and Meta-evaluation Conference Record of ACM Symposium on Principles of Programming Languages, January 1974.
- Carl Hewitt, et. al. Behavioral Semantics of Nonrecursive Control Structure Proceedings of Colloque sur la Programmation, April 1974.
- C.A.R. Hoare. Monitors: An Operating System Structuring Concept CACM. October 1974.
- Irene Greif and Carl Hewitt. Actor Semantics of PLANNER-73 Conference Record of ACM Symposium on Principles of Programming Languages. January 1975.
- Carl Hewitt. How to Use What You Know IJCAI. September, 1975.
- Alan Kay and Adele Goldberg. Smalltalk-72 Instruction Manual Xerox PARC Memo SSL-76-6. May 1976.
- Edsger Dijkstra. A discipline of programming Prentice Hall. 1976.
- Carl Hewitt and Henry Baker Actors and Continuous Functionals Proceeding of IFIP Working Conference on Formal Description of Programming Concepts. August 1-5, 1977.
- Henry Baker and Carl Hewitt The Incremental Garbage Collection of Processes Proceeding of the Symposium on Artificial Intelligence Programming Languages. SIGPLAN Notices 12, August 1977.
- Gilles Kahn and David MacQueen. Coroutines and networks of parallel processes IFIP. 1977
- Aki Yonezawa Specification and Verification Techniques for Parallel Programs Based on Message Passing Semantics MIT EECS Doctoral Dissertation. December 1977.
- Carl Hewitt. Viewing Control Structures as Patterns of Passing Messages Journal of Artificial Intelligence. June 1977.
- Henry Baker. Actor Systems for Real-Time Computation MIT EECS Doctoral Dissertation. January 1978.
- C.A.R. Hoare. Communicating sequential processes CACM. August 1978.
- Carl Hewitt and Russ Atkinson. Synchronization in Actor Systems Proceedings of the 4th ACM SIGACT-SIGPLAN symposium on Principles of programming languages. 1977
- Carl Hewitt and Russ Atkinson. Specification and Proof Techniques for Serializers IEEE Journal on Software Engineering. January 1979.
- Ken Kahn. A Computational Theory of Animation MIT EECS Doctoral Dissertation. August 1979.
- Carl Hewitt, Beppe Attardi, and Henry Lieberman. Delegation in Message Passing Proceedings of First International Conference on Distributed Systems Huntsville, AL. October 1979.
- Nissim Francez, C.A.R. Hoare, Daniel Lehmann, and Willem-Paul de Roever. Semantics of nondetermiism, concurrency, and communication Journal of Computer and System Sciences. December 1979.
- George Milne and Robin Milner. Concurrent processes and their syntax JACM. April 1979.
- Russ Atkinson. Automatic Verification of Serializers MIT Doctoral Dissertation. June, 1980.
- Bill Kornfeld and Carl Hewitt. The Scientific Community Metaphor IEEE Transactions on Systems, Man, and Cybernetics. January 1981.
- Henry Lieberman. Thinking About Lots of Things at Once without Getting Confused: Parallelism in Act 1 MIT AI memo 626. May 1981.
- Henry Lieberman. A Preview of Act 1 MIT AI memo 625. June 1981.
- Bill Kornfeld. Parallelism in Problem Solving MIT EECS Doctoral Dissertation. August 1981.
- Daniel Theriault. A Primer for the Act-1 Language MIT AI memo 672. April 1982.
- Daniel Theriault. Issues in the Design and Implementation of Act 2 MIT AI technical report 728. June 1983.
- Henry Lieberman. An Object-Oriented Simulator for the Apiary Conference of the American Association for Artificial Intelligence, Washington, D. C., August 1983
- Carl Hewitt and Peter de Jong. Analyzing the Roles of Descriptions and Actions in Open Systems Proceedings of the National Conference on Artificial Intelligence. August 1983.
- Carl Hewitt and Henry Lieberman. Design Issues in Parallel Architecture for Artificial Intelligence MIT AI memo 750. Nov. 1983.
- Daniel Ingalls. The Evolution of the Smalltalk Virtual Machine in Smalltalk-80: Bits of History, Words of Advice. Addison Wesley. 1983.
- C.A.R. Hoare. Communicating Sequential Processes Prentice Hall. 1985.
- Carl Hewitt. The Challenge of Open Systems Byte Magazine. April 1985. Reprinted in The foundation of artificial intelligence---a sourcebook Cambridge University Press. 1990.
- Carl Manning. Traveler: the actor observatory ECOOP 1987. Also appears in Lecture Notes in Computer Science, vol. 276.
- William Athas and Charles Seitz Multicomputers: message-passing concurrent computers IEEE Computer August 1988.
- William Athas and Nanette Boden Cantor: An Actor Programming System for Scientific Computing in Proceedings of the NSF Workshop on Object-Based Concurrent Programming. 1988. Special Issue of SIGPLAN Notices.
- Jean-Pierre Briot. From objects to actors: Study of a limited symbiosis in Smalltalk-80 Rapport de Recherche 88-58, RXF-LITP, Paris, France, September 1988
- William Dally and Wills, D. Universal mechanisms for concurrency PARLE 1989.
- W. Horwat, A. Chien, and W. Dally. Experience with CST: Programming and Implementation PLDI. 1989.
- Carl Hewitt. Towards Open Information Systems Semantics Proceedings of 10th International Workshop on Distributed Artificial Intelligence. October 23-27, 1990. Bandera, Texas.
- Akinori Yonezawa, Ed. ABCL: An Object-Oriented Concurrent System MIT Press. 1990.
- K. Kahn and Vijay A. Saraswat, "Actors as a special case of concurrent constraint (logic) programming", in SIGPLAN Notices, October 1990. Describes Janus.
- Carl Hewitt. Open Information Systems Semantics Journal of Artificial Intelligence. January 1991.
- Carl Hewitt and Jeff Inman. DAI Betwixt and Between: From "Intelligent Agents" to Open Systems Science IEEE Transactions on Systems, Man, and Cybernetics. Nov./Dec. 1991.
- Carl Hewitt and Gul Agha. Guarded Horn clause languages: are they deductive and Logical? International Conference on Fifth Generation Computer Systems, Ohmsha 1988. Tokyo. Also in Artificial Intelligence at MIT, Vol. 2. MIT Press 1991.
- William Dally, et al. The Message-Driven Processor: A Multicomputer Processing Node with Efficient Mechanisms IEEE Micro. April 1992.
- S. Miriyala, G. Agha, and Y.Sami. Visulatizing actor programs using predicate transition nets Journal of Visual Programming. 1992.
- Alan Kay. The Early History of Smalltalk The second ACM conference on history of programming languages. 1993.
- Carl Hewitt and Carl Manning. Negotiation Architecture for Large-Scale Crisis Management AAAI-94 Workshop on Models of Conflict Management in Cooperative Problem Solving. Seattle, WA. Aug. 4, 1994.
- Darrell Woelk. Developing InfoSleuth Agents Using Rosette: An Actor Based Language Proceedings of the CIKM '95 Workshop on Intelligent Information Agents. 1995.
- Carl Hewitt and Carl Manning. Synthetic Infrastructures for Multi-Agency Systems Proceedings of ICMAS '96. Kyoto, Japan. December 8–13, 1996.
- S. Frolund. Coordinating Distributed Objects: An Actor-Based Approach for Synchronization MIT Press. November 1996.
- W. Kim. ThAL: An Actor System for Efficient and Scalable Concurrent Computing PhD thesis. University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign. 1997.
- Jean-Pierre Briot. Acttalk: A framework for object-oriented concurrent programming-design and experience 2nd France-Japan workshop. 1999.
- N. Jamali, P. Thati, and G. Agha. An actor based architecture for customizing and controlling agent ensembles IEEE Intelligent Systems. 14(2). 1999.
- Don Box, David Ehnebuske, Gopal Kakivaya, Andrew Layman, Noah Mendelsohn, Henrik Nielsen, Satish Thatte, Dave Winer. Simple Object Access Protocol (SOAP) 1.1 W3C Note. May 2000.
- M. Astley, D. Sturman, and G. Agha. Customizable middleware for modular distributed software CACM. 44(5) 2001.
- Carlos Varela. Worldwide Computing with Universal Actors: Linguistic Abstractions for Naming, Migration, and Coordination PhD thesis. U. of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. 2001.
- N. Venkatasubramanian, C. Talcott, and G. Agha. A formal model for reasoning about adaptive QoS-enabled middleware Formal Methods Europe (FME). 2001.
- Edward Lee, S. Neuendorffer, and M. Wirthlin. Actor-oriented design of embedded hardware and software systems Journal of circuits, systems, and computers. 2002.
- P. Thati, R. Ziaei, and G. Agha. A Theory of May Testing for Actors Formal Methods for Open Object-based Distributed Systems. March 2002.
- P. Thati, R. Ziaei, and G. Agha. A theory of may testing for asynchronous calculi with locality and no name matching Algebraic Methodology and Software Technology. Springer Verlag. September 2002. LNCS 2422.
- Gul Agha and Carlos Varela. Worldwide Computing Middleware Practical Handbook on Internet Computing. CRC Press, 2004.
- Stephen Neuendorffer. Actor-Oriented Metaprogramming PhD Thesis. University of California, Berkeley. December, 2004
- Carl Hewitt. The repeated demise of logic programming and why it will be reincarnated What Went Wrong and Why: Lessons from AI Research and Applications. Technical Report SS-06-08. AAAI Press. March 2006.
[edit] External links
- A now dated set of speculations by Paul Mackay can be found at Why has the actor model not succeeded?