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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
41

Evaluation on how suitable open source tools are for model to model transformation : An industrial point of view

Márki, András January 2013 (has links)
Model-Driven Development can improve the development process, but it needs tools for model transformation. For industrial companies, the most important aspect is that the transformation tools should scale well, so that they can be used with huge models. There are some open-source model transformation tools on the market, and this report aims to investigate the scalability of open source tools for model transformation. For the investigation, Eclipse Modeling Framework is used. This report identifies four open-source model transformation tools (ATL, QVT Operational, QVT Declarative, SmartQVT) and identifies the variables needed for a tool to be evaluated within the bounds of an experiment. The only tool which could be benchmarked was ATL, which scaled linearly in both terms of transformation time and memory consumption.
42

A comparison of component-based software engineering and model-driven development from the ProCom perspective

Grozev, Nikolay January 2011 (has links)
Component-based software engineering (CBSE) and model-driven development (MDD) are two approaches for handling software development complexity. In essence, while CBSE focuses on the construction of systems from existing software modules called components; MDD promotes the usage of system models which after a series of transformations result with an implementation of the desired system. Even though they are different, MDD and CBSE are not mutually exclusive. However, there has not been any substantial research about what their similarities and differences are and how they can be combined. In this respect, the main goal of this thesis is to summarize the theoretical background of MDD and CBSE, and to propose and apply a systematic method for their comparison. The method takes into account the different effects that these development paradigms have on a wide range of development aspects. The comparison results are then summarized and analyzed. The thesis also enriches the theoretical discussion with a practical case study comparing CBSE and MDD with respect to ProCom, a component model designed for the development of component-based embedded systems in the vehicular-, automation- and telecommunication domains. The aforementioned comparison method is refined and applied for this purpose. The comparison results are again summarized, analyzed and proposals about future work on ProCom are made.
43

Architectural Rules Conformance with ArCon and Open-SourceModeling Tools

Fridell, Emil January 2012 (has links)
In software development it is often crucial that the system implementationfollows the architecture dened through design patterns and a constraint set.In Model-Driven development most artefacts are created using models, butthe architectural design rules is one area where no standard to model therules exists. ArCon, Architecture Conformance Checker, is a tool to checkconformance of architectural design rules on a system model, dened in UML,that implements the system or application. The architectural design rules aredened in a UML model but with a specic meaning, dierent from standardUML, proposed by the authors of ArCon. Within this thesis ArCon wasextended to be able to check models created by the Open-Source modelingtool Papyrus, and integrated as a plugin on the Eclipse platform. The methodused by ArCon, to dene architectural rules, was also given a short evaluationduring the project to get a hint of its potential and future use. The case-studyshowed some problems and potential improvements of the used implementationof ArCon and its supported method.
44

Un environnement pour le développement rigoureux de composants répartis : formalisation et outils logiciels / A framework for rigorous development of distributed components : formalisation and tools

Kulankhina, Oleksandra 14 October 2016 (has links)
Dans cette thèse, nous proposons une approche rigoureuse pour la conception et le développement de systèmes à base de composants hiérarchiques distribués. L’idée de base du travail présenté est de combiner les techniques de conception de logiciels dirigées par les modèles, bien connues des programmeurs, avec des méthodes de vérification formelles puissantes, capables d’assurer les propriétés fonctionnelles d’un système distribué et de détecter les erreurs dès le stade de la conception. Tout d’abord, nous introduisons un formalisme graphique basé sur UML pour l’architecture et le comportement des composants hiérarchiques de modélisation. Deuxièmement, nous spécifions formellement un ensemble de contraintes qui assurent la correction de la composition des composants, en mettant l’accent sur la séparation entre les aspects fonctionnels et non-fonctionnels. Troisièmement, nous expliquons comment nos modèles graphiques peuvent être traduits automatiquement dans le formalisme d’entrée d’un model-checker. Nous nous concentrons ensuite sur le codage des fonctionnalités avancées de composants distribués, comme communications de 1 vers N, la reconfiguration et les communications asynchrones basées sur les appels de procédures distants. Enfin, nous mettons en oeuvre cette approche dans une plateforme intégrée orienté modèle qui comprend un ensemble d’éditeurs graphiques, un module de validation de la décision correcte de l’architecture statique, un module traduisant le modèle conceptuel dans une entrée pour la plateforme de vérification CADP, et enfin un générateur de code exécutable / In this thesis we introduce an approach for rigorous design and development of distributed hierarchical component-based systems. The core idea of the presented work is to combine the well-known among the programmers techniques for modeldriven software design and the powerful formal verification methods able to ensure the functional properties of a distributed system and to detect errors at the early design stage. First, we introduce a UML-based graphical formalism for modelling architecture and behaviour of hierarchical components. Second, we formally specify a set of constraints that ensure the correct components composition with a focus on separation between the functional and non-functional aspects. Third, we explain how the graphical models can be automatically translated into an input for a model-checker. For this aim, we rely on a formally specified intermediate structure encoding the semantics of components behaviour as a network of synchronised parametrised label transition systems. We focus here on encoding the advanced features of distributed components such as one-to-many communications, reconfiguration, and asynchronous communications based on request-reply. Finally, we implement the approach in an integrated model-driven environment which comprises a set of graphical editors, an architecture static correctness validation plug-in, a plug-in translating the conceptual model into an input for a verification toolsuite CADP, and a generator of the implementation code
45

Promoting Traits into Model-Driven Development

Abdelzad, Vahdat January 2017 (has links)
Traits are primitive units of code reuse that serve as building blocks of classes. In this research, we enhance reuse by extending the capabilities of traits; in particular, we add modeling abstractions to them. Traits have a variety of benefits, including facilitating reuse and separation of concerns. They have appeared in several programming languages, particularly derivatives of Smalltalk. However, there is still no support for traits that contain modeling abstractions, and no straightforward support for them in general-purpose programming languages. The latter is due to structural concerns that exist for them at runtime, especially traits that contain modeling abstractions. Model-driven technologies are making inroads into the development community, albeit slowly. Modeling abstractions such as state machines and associations provide new opportunities for reuse, and can be combined with inheritance for even greater reusability. However, issues with inheritance apply also when these new abstractions are inheritable units. This suggests that traits and models ought to be able to be synergistically combined. We perform a comprehensive analysis of using modeling elements in traits. We implement such traits in Umple, which is a model-oriented programming language that permits embedding of programming concepts into models. The contributions of the thesis are: a) Adding new elements including state machines and associations into traits, hence bringing more reusability, modularity, and applications to traits; b) Developing an algorithm that allows reusing, extending, and composing state machines through traits; c) Extending traits with required interfaces so dependencies at the semantic level become part of their usage, rather than simple syntactic capture; d) Adding template parameters with associations in traits, offering new applications for traits in which it is possible to define design patterns and to have a library of most-used functionality; e) The implementation of all the above concepts, including generating code in multiple general-purpose programming languages through automatic model transformation.
46

Integrating Formal Methods with Model-Driven Engineering

Adesina, Opeyemi January 2017 (has links)
This thesis presents our method to integrate formal methods with model-driven engineering. Although a large amount of literature exists with the goal of facilitating the adoption of formal methods for educational and industrial practice, yet the adoption of formal methods in academia and industry is poor. The goal of this research is to improve the adoption of formal methods by automating the generation of formal methods code while maintaining scalability and bridging the gaps between formal analysis and actual implementation of the complete system. Our approach is based on generating formal representations of software abstractions expressed in a textual language, called Umple, which is derived from UML. Software abstractions of interest include class models and state machines. For state machines, we address concerns such as composite and concurrent states separately. The resulting systems are analyzable by back-end analysis engines such as Alloy and nuXmv or NuSMV for model checking. To ensure correctness of our approach, we have adopted simulation, empirical studies and rigorous test-driven development (TDD) methodologies. To guarantee correctness of state machine systems under analysis (SSUAs), we present methods to automatically generate specifications to analyze domain-independent properties such as non-determinism and reachability analysis. We apply these methods in various case studies; certify their conformance with sets of requirements and uncover certain flaws. Our contributions include a) The overall approach, involving having the developer write the system in Umple and generating both the formal system for analysis and the final code from the same model; b) a novel approach to encode SSUAs even in the presence of and-cross transitions; c) a fully automated approach to certify an SSUA to be free from nondeterminism even in the presence of unbounded domains and multiple and-cross transitions within the same enclosing orthogonal state; d) an empirical study of the impact of abstraction on some performance parameters; and e) a translator from Umple to Alloy and SMV.
47

Zhodnocení stavu systému Business Intelligence a návrhy na jeho zlepšení / Assessing the state of Business Intelligence and proposals for its improvement

Švec, Richard January 2015 (has links)
This thesis analyzes the situation in the area of Business Intelligence at O2 Czech Republic. It focuses on identifying key issues and finding solutions to the overall improvement of the service within the company. It can be a guide for managers on how to proceed in the analysis of the BI environment, finding opportunities for improving organization setup and technical aspects, especially in the data warehouse solution. Here one can also find recommendations on how to proceed with the definition of development methodologies and how to effectively set the tools and processes associated with the development of the data warehouse. This approach results in an efficient, clearly documented and sustainable development concept of the data warehouse in a large company.
48

Mixsets: Combining Annotative and Compositional Approaches to Variability and Product Lines

Algablan, Abdulaziz 10 December 2021 (has links)
In this thesis, we present mixsets, an approach to combine annotative and compositional fragments for specifying code variants to form software product lines (SPLs). There are three key contributions of our research: introducing mixsets to represent software variability, extending mixsets to construct feature models, and improving software composition to achieve fine-grained variability. The concept of mixsets is introduced in Umple as a conditional unit and a first-class entity to allow smoothly transitioning software to compositional SPLs. A mixset is a named set of mixins; each mixin belonging to the mixset is called a fragment. A mixset fragment can be a top-level entity that contains nested entities or can be embedded as a conditional fragment in other entities such as methods. Mixset content normally includes code blocks or statements of any type, and may include require statements, which describe explicit dependencies among mixsets. Mixsets can be used to specify product lines using code composition, code annotation or both. A strength of mixsets lies on the straightforward mechanism to transform annotated segments into compositional segments when used in a combined approach. Therefore, preplanning effort and time to transform annotative SPLs to compositional SPLs can be reduced. Mixsets can provide a backbone structure to realize product line features in a feature-based SPL. Hence, a feature model can be formed using a subset of specific dependent mixsets. Feature interactions within an SPL can be identified and separated in specific modules by mixset nesting. Furthermore, product configuration, feature modeling analysis and generation of feature diagrams can be accomplished based on mixsets. The thesis also demonstrates a method to enable the granularity of compositional approaches to be expressed at the statement level. This is achieved by allowing aspects to inject code into labelled places, or points of variation, within method code. Such injected code has a full access to the context in which its placed, such as access to local variables. Mixsets are implemented in Umple, a model-driven development (MDD) technology that allows combining abstract models, such as associations and state machines, with pure code, and generating code in multiple programming languages. Mixsets can thus be used to describe variations in models, not just code. The thesis uses a design science approach as its research methodology. The mixset concept is evaluated through three case studies. The first applies mixsets to the Oracle Berkeley Database SPL, which is used in other literature to evaluate SPL concepts. This study shows that the mixset implementation improves on the state of the art in several respects, such as elimination of complex workarounds that are required by other approaches. In the second study, mixsets help to refactor Umple into feature-oriented SPL. The case study shows how annotative fragments can be easily transformed into compositional counterparts. In the third study, mixsets help to present two alternative solutions the to the Rover Control Challenge Problem of the MDETools 2018 workshop.
49

Model-driven development for Microservices : A domain-specific modeling language for Kubernetes

Johansson, Daniel January 2022 (has links)
In the digital age that we live in today, we are dependent on numerous web applications or services, from dealing with banking, booking air flights, and handling our taxes. We expect these applications and services to support high availability, data loss prevention, and fast response time. Microservices is a design pattern to support faster software change, and it also supports other non-functional attributes such as scalability and high availability. One way to deploy your software as microservices is to use containers and deploy them on a container cluster such as Kubernetes. The public opinion about writing Kubernetes deployment files is that it is complex and repetitive writing. This project aims to see how model-driven development can assist with the creation of the Kubernetes deployment files. To see how model-driven development can assist in the creation of Kubernetes files. The project will implement a domain-specific modeling language for Kubernetes, and the language should be able to model the application's desired states. And by using model transformation, the tool can generate Kubernetes deployable files.
50

Linguagem específica de domínio para abstração de solução de processamento de eventos complexos

DINIZ, Herbertt Barros Mangueira 04 March 2016 (has links)
Submitted by Fabio Sobreira Campos da Costa (fabio.sobreira@ufpe.br) on 2016-10-31T12:04:21Z No. of bitstreams: 2 license_rdf: 1232 bytes, checksum: 66e71c371cc565284e70f40736c94386 (MD5) DissertacaoHerbertt_CIN_UFPE.pdf: 3162767 bytes, checksum: 3208dfce28e7404730479384c2ba99a0 (MD5) / Made available in DSpace on 2016-10-31T12:04:21Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 2 license_rdf: 1232 bytes, checksum: 66e71c371cc565284e70f40736c94386 (MD5) DissertacaoHerbertt_CIN_UFPE.pdf: 3162767 bytes, checksum: 3208dfce28e7404730479384c2ba99a0 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2016-03-04 / Cada vez mais se evidencia uma maior escassez de recursos e uma disputa por espaços físicos, em decorrência da crescente e demasiada concentração populacional nas grandes cidades. Nesse âmbito, surge a necessidade de soluções que vão de encontro à iniciativa de “Cidades Inteligentes" (Smart Cities). Essas soluções buscam centralizar o monitoramento e controle, para auxiliar no apoio à tomada de decisão. No entanto, essas fontes de TICs formam estruturas complexas e geram um grande volume de dados, que apresentam enormes desafios e oportunidades. Uma das principais ferramentas tecnológicas utilizadas nesse contexto é o Complex Event Processing (CEP), o qual pode ser considerado uma boa solução, para lidar com o aumento da disponibilidade de grandes volumes de dados, em tempo real. CEPs realizam captação de eventos de maneira simplificada, utilizando linguagem de expressão, para definir e executar regras de processamento. No entanto, apesar da eficiência comprovada dessas ferramentas, o fato das regras serem expressas em baixo nível, torna o seu uso exclusivo para usuários especialistas, dificultando a criação de soluções. Com intuito de diminuir a complexidade das ferramentas de CEP, em algumas soluções, tem-se utilizado uma abordagem de modelos Model-Driven Development (MDD), a fim de se produzir uma camada de abstração, que possibilite criar regras, sem que necessariamente seja um usuário especialista em linguagem de CEP. No entanto, muitas dessas soluções acabam tornando-se mais complexas no seu manuseio do que o uso convencional da linguagem de baixo nível. Este trabalho tem por objetivo a construção de uma Graphic User Interface (GUI) para criação de regras de CEP, utilizando MDD, a fim de tornar o desenvolvimento mais intuitivo, através de um modelo adaptado as necessidades do usuário não especialista. / Nowadays is Increasingly evident a greater resources scarcity and competition for physical space, in result of growing up and large population concentration into large cities. In this context, comes up the necessity of solutions that are in compliance with initiative of smart cities. Those solutions seek concentrate monitoring and control, for help to make decisions. Although, this sources of information technology and communications (ITCs) forming complex structures and generates a huge quantity of data that represents biggest challenges and opportunities. One of the main technological tools used in this context is the Complex Event Processing (CEP), which may be considered a good solution to deal with increase of the availability and large volume of data, in real time. The CEPs realizes captation of events in a simple way, using expressive languages, to define and execute processing rules. Although the efficient use of this tools, the fact of the rules being expressed in low level, becomes your use exclusive for specialists, difficulting the creation of solutions. With the aim of reduce the complexity of the CEPs tools, solutions has used an approach of models Model-Driven Development (MDD), in order to produce an abstraction layer, that allows to create rules, without necessarily being a specialist in CEP languages. however, many this tools become more complex than the conventional low level language approach. This work aims to build a Graphic User Interface (GUI) for the creation of CEP rules, using MDD, in order to a more intuitive development, across of the adapted model how necessities of the non specialist users.

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