799 research outputs found

    Automated Experiments for Deriving Performance-relevant Properties of Software Execution Environments

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    The execution environment can play a crucial role when analyzing the performance of a software system. However, detecting execution environment properties and integrating such properties into performance analyses is a manual, error-prone task. In this thesis, a novel approach for detecting performance-relevant properties of the software execution environment is presented. These properties are automatically detected using predefined experiments and integrated into performance prediction tools

    An Approach of QoS Evaluation for Web Services Design With Optimized Avoidance of SLA Violations

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    Quality of service (QoS) is an official agreement that governs the contractual commitments between service providers and consumers in respect to various nonfunctional requirements, such as performance, dependability, and security. While more Web services are available for the construction of software systems based upon service-oriented architecture (SOA), QoS has become a decisive factor for service consumers to choose from service providers who provide similar services. QoS is usually documented on a service-level agreement (SLA) to ensure the functionality and quality of services and to define monetary penalties in case of any violation of the written agreement. Consequently, service providers have a strong interest in keeping their commitments to avoid and reduce the situations that may cause SLA violations.However, there is a noticeable shortage of tools that can be used by service providers to either quantitively evaluate QoS of their services for the predication of SLA violations or actively adjust their design for the avoidance of SLA violations with optimized service reconfigurations. Developed in this dissertation research is an innovative framework that tackles the problem of SLA violations in three separated yet connected phases. For a given SOA system under examination, the framework employs sensitivity analysis in the first phase to identify factors that are influential to system performance, and the impact of influential factors on QoS is then quantitatively measured with a metamodel-based analysis in the second phase. The results of analyses are then used in the third phase to search both globally and locally for optimal solutions via a controlled number of experiments. In addition to technical details, this dissertation includes experiment results to demonstrate that this new approach can help service providers not only predicting SLA violations but also avoiding the unnecessary increase of the operational cost during service optimization

    Work System Theory as a Platform: Response to a Research Perspective Article by Niederman and March

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    In this paper, I respond to “Moving the Work System Theory Forward” (Niederman & March, 2014), a JAIS research perspective paper about another paper on work system theory (Alter, 2013e). The research perspective paper recognizes value in the work system approach, suggests that WST is not a proper theory, and suggests areas for related theory development. After summarizing the main ideas in WST, I explain disagreements between Niederman and March (2014) and Alter (2013e)— (hereafter called N&M and the WST paper) about what WST is and what WST should become. I note that N&M interprets basic ideas in WST differently than the WST paper defines them. I note that N&M’s critique of WST is anchored in issues about the nature of theory, especially a preference for Gregor’s type 4 theory. I explain that WST is a special case of general system theory and, as such, should not and cannot take the form of a theory that expresses relationships between independent variables, moderating variables, and dependent variables. I also explain why the WST paper called WST a theory when it might have been called something else, and also why the WST paper does not treat the development of the work system method (WSM) as a design science research project. Lastly, I respond directly to N&M’s title, “Moving the Work System Theory Forward” by explaining that WST is becoming a platform for applications and extensions in IS and other disciplines, which I illustrate with examples under five categories

    A Layered Reference Architecture for Metamodels to Tailor Quality Modeling and Analysis

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    The 5th Conference of PhD Students in Computer Science

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    Using domain specific languages to capture design knowledge for model-based systems engineering

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    Design synthesis is a fundamental engineering task that involves the creation of structure from a desired functional specification; it involves both creating a system topology as well as sizing the system's components. Although the use of computer tools is common throughout the design process, design synthesis is often a task left to the designer. At the synthesis stage of the design process, designers have an extensive choice of design alternatives that need to be considered and evaluated. Designers can benefit from computational synthesis methods in the creative phase of the design process. Recent increases in computational power allow automated synthesis methods for rapidly generating a large number of design solutions. Combining an automated synthesis method with an evaluation framework allows for a more thorough exploration of the design space as well as for a reduction of the time and cost needed to design a system. To facilitate computational synthesis, knowledge about feasible system configurations must be captured. Since it is difficult to capture such synthesis knowledge about any possible system, a design domain must be chosen. In this thesis, the design domain is hydraulic systems. In this thesis, Model-Driven Software Development concepts are leveraged to create a framework to automate the synthesis of hydraulic systems will be presented and demonstrated. This includes the presentation of a domain specific language to describe the function and structure of hydraulic systems as well as a framework for synthesizing hydraulic systems using graph grammars to generate system topologies. Also, a method using graph grammars for generating analysis models from the described structural system representations is presented. This approach fits in the context of Model-Based Systems Engineering where a variety of formal models are used to represent knowledge about a system. It uses the Systems Modeling Language developed by The Object Management Group (OMG SysML™) as a unifying language for model definition.M.S.Committee Chair: Paredis, Chris; Committee Member: McGinnis, Leon; Committee Member: Schaefer, Dir

    Assessment of IT Infrastructures: A Model Driven Approach

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    Several approaches to evaluate IT infrastructure architectures have been proposed, mainly by supplier and consulting firms. However, they do not have a unified approach of these architectures where all stakeholders can cement the decision-making process, thus facilitating comparability as well as the verification of best practices adoption. The main goal of this dissertation is the proposal of a model-based approach to mitigate this problem. A metamodel named SDM (System Definition Model) and expressed with the UML (Unified Modeling Language) is used to represent structural and operational knowledge on the infrastructures. This metamodel is automatically instantiated through the capture of infrastructures configurations of existing distributed architectures, using a proprietary tool and a transformation tool that was built in the scope of this dissertation. The quantitative evaluation is performed using the M2DM (Meta-Model Driven Measurement) approach that uses OCL (Object Constraint Language) to formulate the required metrics. This proposal is expected to increase the understandability of IT infrastructures by all stakeholders (IT architects, application developers, testers, operators and maintenance teams) as well as to allow expressing their strategies of management and evolution. To illustrate the use of the proposed approach, we assess the complexity of some real cases in the diachronic and synchronic perspective

    Architecture-based Evolution of Dependable Software-intensive Systems

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    This cumulative habilitation thesis, proposes concepts for (i) modelling and analysing dependability based on architectural models of software-intensive systems early in development, (ii) decomposition and composition of modelling languages and analysis techniques to enable more flexibility in evolution, and (iii) bridging the divergent levels of abstraction between data of the operation phase, architectural models and source code of the development phase

    Consistent View-Based Management of Variability in Space and Time

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    Developing variable systems faces many challenges. Dependencies between interrelated artifacts within a product variant, such as code or diagrams, across product variants and across their revisions quickly lead to inconsistencies during evolution. This work provides a unification of common concepts and operations for variability management, identifies variability-related inconsistencies and presents an approach for view-based consistency preservation of variable systems
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