126 research outputs found

    A view of the dynamic software product line landscape

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    Dynamic software product lines extend the concept of conventional SPLs by enabling software-variant generation at runtime. Recent studies yield insights into the current state of the DSPL field, research trends, and major gaps to address

    Influencia de la infección por VIH/sida sobre algunos indicadores bioquímicos del estado nutricional

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    The main objective of this study was to analyze the influence of nutritional state among HIV-1 infected people, according to the different clinical stages referred by the CDC (Control Disease Center of the United States) in 1987, as well as the changes in the concentrations of some biochemical markers linked to nutritional state. A similar study was carried out in a control group with UltramicroELISA non-reagent healthy individuals, anthropometrically classified. Concentrations of total proteins, albumin, cholesterol, three-glycerides, urea, uric acid and creatinine were analyzed by sex and clinical group, comparing the levels obtained through a variance study. When comparing HIV-1 asymptomatic infected patients to HIV-1 and HIV-2 non infected people, the results showed a non significant increase in the level of total proteins with a significant decrease of albumin and creatinine, the latter observed only in male patients. In stage IV patients, an important decrease of cholesterol and a significant increase of the threeglicerides were found, as well as the lowest albumin levels. Urea and uric acid levels did not experience statistically significant changes. It was concluded that the study of biochemical markers is advisable, since it contributes to the detection by default of malnutrition marginal states in infected individuals.Con el objetivo de analizar la influencia de la infección por el VIH y el estadio clínico de la enfermedad sobre indicadores bioquímicos del estado nutricional del individuo, se estudió un grupo de individuos infectados y clasificados en diferentes grupos clínicos, de acuerdo con los criterios propuestos en 1987 por el Centro de Control de Enfermedades de los Estados Unidos, así como un grupo control integrado por sujetos seronegativos al VIH y clasificados antropométricamente con un estado nutricional normal. Se analizaron las variaciones experimentadas por las proteínas totales, albúmina, colesterol, triacilglicéridos, urea, ácido úrico y creatinina, según sexo y grupo clínico, para lo cual se realizó la comparación de las medias obtenidas por medio de un análisis de la varianza. Al compararlos con los seronegativos, se encontró en los seropositivos asintomáticos un incremento no significativo de las proteínas totales con disminución significativa de la albúmina y la creatinina; esta última sólo en el sexo masculino. En los pacientes del estadio IV se manifestó la disminución más importante del colesterol y un aumento significativo de los triglicéridos, así como los niveles más bajos de albúmina. La urea y el ácido úrico no experimentaron cambios con significación estadística. Se recomienda la determinación de indicadores bioquímicos en la detección de estados marginales de malnutrición por defecto en individuos VIH/SIDA

    Hosting and Using Services with QoS Guarantee in Self-adaptive Service Systems

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    Abstract. In service-oriented computing, the vision is a market of services with alternative providers offering the same services with different cost and quality of service (QoS) properties, where applications form and adapt dynamically through dynamic service discovery and binding. To ensure decent and stable QoS to end users and efficient use of resources, it is required that both client applications and service implementations are able to adapt both their internal configuration and their binding to other actors in response to changes in the environment. To this end, service level negotiation and agreements (SLA) are important to ensure coordinated end to end adaptation. In this paper we propose a solution based on the integration of an SLA mechanism into a compositional adaptation planning framework and describe a simple yet powerful implementation targeted for resource constrained mobile devices. As validation we include a case study based on a peer-to-peer distributed mobile application

    From model-driven software development processes to problem diagnoses at runtime

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    Following the “convention over configuration” paradigm, model-driven software development (MDSD) generates code to implement the “default” behaviour that has been specified by a template separate from the input model. On the one hand, developers can produce end-products without a full understanding of the templates; on the other hand, the tacit knowledge in the templates is subtle to diagnose when a runtime software failure occurs. Therefore, there is a gap between templates and runtime adapted models. Generalising from the concrete problematic examples in MDSD processes to a model-based problem diagnosis, the chapter presents a procedure to separate the automated fixes from those runtime gaps that require human judgments

    Exploring quality-aware architectural transformations at run-time: the ENIA case

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    Adapting software systems at run-time is a key issue, especially when these systems consist of components used as intermediary for human-computer interaction. In this sense, model transformation techniques have a widespread acceptance as a mechanism for adapting and evolving the software architecture of such systems. However, existing model transformations often focus on functional requirements, and quality attributes are only manually considered after the transformations are done. This paper aims to improve the quality of adaptations and evolutions in component-based software systems by taking into account quality attributes within the model transformation process. To this end, we present a quality-aware transformation process using software architecture metrics to select among many alternative model transformations. Such metrics evaluate the quality attributes of an architecture. We validate the presented quality-aware transformation process in ENIA, a geographic information system whose user interfaces are based on coarsegrained components and need to be adapted at run-time
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