29,576 research outputs found
ADEPT2 - Next Generation Process Management Technology
If current process management systems shall be applied to a broad spectrum of applications, they will have to be significantly improved with respect to their technological capabilities. In particular, in dynamic environments it must be possible to quickly implement and deploy new processes, to enable ad-hoc modifications of single process instances at runtime (e.g., to add, delete or shift process steps), and to support process schema evolution with instance migration, i.e., to propagate process schema changes to already running instances. These requirements must be met without affecting process consistency and by preserving the robustness of the process management system. In this paper we describe how these challenges have been addressed and solved in the ADEPT2 Process Management System. Our overall vision is to provide a next generation process management technology which can be used in a variety of application domains
A New Approach for Quality Management in Pervasive Computing Environments
This paper provides an extension of MDA called Context-aware Quality Model
Driven Architecture (CQ-MDA) which can be used for quality control in pervasive
computing environments. The proposed CQ-MDA approach based on
ContextualArchRQMM (Contextual ARCHitecture Quality Requirement MetaModel),
being an extension to the MDA, allows for considering quality and
resources-awareness while conducting the design process. The contributions of
this paper are a meta-model for architecture quality control of context-aware
applications and a model driven approach to separate architecture concerns from
context and quality concerns and to configure reconfigurable software
architectures of distributed systems. To demonstrate the utility of our
approach, we use a videoconference system.Comment: 10 pages, 10 Figures, Oral Presentation in ECSA 201
Identifying and Modelling Complex Workflow Requirements in Web Applications
Workflow plays a major role in nowadays business and therefore its
requirement elicitation must be accurate and clear for achieving the solution
closest to businessâs needs. Due to Web applications popularity, the Web is becoming
the standard platform for implementing business workflows. In this
context, Web applications and their workflows must be adapted to market demands
in such a way that time and effort are minimize. As they get more popular,
they must give support to different functional requirements but also they
contain tangled and scattered behaviour. In this work we present a model-driven
approach for modelling workflows using a Domain Specific Language for Web
application requirement called WebSpec. We present an extension to WebSpec
based on Pattern Specifications for modelling crosscutting workflow requirements
identifying tangled and scattered behaviour and reducing inconsistencies
early in the cycle
Dynamic Adaptive Point Cloud Streaming
High-quality point clouds have recently gained interest as an emerging form
of representing immersive 3D graphics. Unfortunately, these 3D media are bulky
and severely bandwidth intensive, which makes it difficult for streaming to
resource-limited and mobile devices. This has called researchers to propose
efficient and adaptive approaches for streaming of high-quality point clouds.
In this paper, we run a pilot study towards dynamic adaptive point cloud
streaming, and extend the concept of dynamic adaptive streaming over HTTP
(DASH) towards DASH-PC, a dynamic adaptive bandwidth-efficient and view-aware
point cloud streaming system. DASH-PC can tackle the huge bandwidth demands of
dense point cloud streaming while at the same time can semantically link to
human visual acuity to maintain high visual quality when needed. In order to
describe the various quality representations, we propose multiple thinning
approaches to spatially sub-sample point clouds in the 3D space, and design a
DASH Media Presentation Description manifest specific for point cloud
streaming. Our initial evaluations show that we can achieve significant
bandwidth and performance improvement on dense point cloud streaming with minor
negative quality impacts compared to the baseline scenario when no adaptations
is applied.Comment: 6 pages, 23rd ACM Packet Video (PV'18) Workshop, June 12--15, 2018,
Amsterdam, Netherland
Cloud service localisation
The essence of cloud computing is the provision of software
and hardware services to a range of users in dierent locations. The aim of cloud service localisation is to facilitate the internationalisation and localisation of cloud services by allowing their adaption to dierent locales.
We address the lingual localisation by providing service-level language translation techniques to adopt services to dierent languages and regulatory localisation by providing standards-based mappings to achieve regulatory compliance with regionally varying laws, standards and regulations. The aim is to support and enforce the explicit modelling of
aspects particularly relevant to localisation and runtime support consisting of tools and middleware services to automating the deployment based on models of locales, driven by the two localisation dimensions.
We focus here on an ontology-based conceptual information model that integrates locale specication in a coherent way
Aspects of Assembly and Cascaded Aspects of Assembly: Logical and Temporal Properties
Highly dynamic computing environments, like ubiquitous and pervasive
computing environments, require frequent adaptation of applications. This has
to be done in a timely fashion, and the adaptation process must be as fast as
possible and mastered. Moreover the adaptation process has to ensure a
consistent result when finished whereas adaptations to be implemented cannot be
anticipated at design time. In this paper we present our mechanism for
self-adaptation based on the aspect oriented programming paradigm called Aspect
of Assembly (AAs). Using AAs: (1) the adaptations process is fast and its
duration is mastered; (2) adaptations' entities are independent of each other
thanks to the weaver logical merging mechanism; and (3) the high variability of
the software infrastructure can be managed using a mono or multi-cycle weaving
approach.Comment: 14 pages, published in International Journal of Computer Science,
Volume 8, issue 4, Jul 2011, ISSN 1694-081
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