Requirements Elicitation through Model-Driven Evaluation of Software Components

Author(s):  
L. Chung ◽  
Weimin Ma ◽  
K. Cooper

2020 ◽  
pp. 53-108
Author(s):  
Christian Schlegel ◽  
Alex Lotz ◽  
Matthias Lutz ◽  
Dennis Stampfer

AbstractSuccessful engineering principles for building software systems rely on the separation of concerns for mastering complexity. However, just working on different concerns of a system in a collaborative way is not good enough for economically feasible tailored solutions. A successful approach for this is the composition of complex systems out of commodity building blocks. These come as is and can be represented as blocks with ports via data sheets. Data sheets are models and allow a proper selection and configuration as well as the prediction of the behavior of a building block in a specific context. This chapter explains how model-driven approaches can be used to support separation of roles and composition for robotics software systems. The models, open-source tools, open-source robotics software components and fully deployable robotics software systems shape a robotics software ecosystem.



2013 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
pp. 19-30 ◽  
Author(s):  
Oksana Nikiforova ◽  
Konstantins Gusarovs ◽  
Olegs Gorbiks ◽  
Natalja Pavlova

Abstract In this paper an ability to apply the two-hemisphere model-driven approach for creation of the UML class diagram is discussed and the way to avoid the limitations of the approach is offered. The result of the proposed improvement of the twohemisphere model-driven approach is the increased number of elements of the UML class diagram available for automatic generation and several statements for semi-automatic transformation of business process diagram and the concept diagram into software components. As a result, the authors can ascertain that it is possible to apply the improved twohemisphere model-driven approach in practice in the real software development, and not only for academic purpose.



Author(s):  
Gordon Deline ◽  
Fuhua Lin ◽  
Dunwei Wen ◽  
Dragan Gaševic ◽  
Kinshuk N/A

This article presents a case study of ontology-driven development of intelligent educational systems. Following a review of literature related to ontology development, ontology-driven software development, and traditional software engineering, we developed an ontology-driven software development methodology appropriate for intelligent ontology-driven systems which have ontologies as key execution components, such as e-Advisor, and which is biased toward an integration of incremental and iterative ontology development and downstream Model Driven Architecture for development of software components.



2018 ◽  
pp. 343-348
Author(s):  
Amir Pirayesh ◽  
Guy Doumeingts ◽  
João Sousa ◽  
Carlos Agostinho ◽  
Sudeep Ghimire ◽  
...  


Author(s):  
José Alfonso Aguilar ◽  
Aníbal Zaldívar-Colado ◽  
Carolina Tripp-Barba ◽  
Sanjay Misra ◽  
Roberto Bernal ◽  
...  


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chunling Sheng ◽  
Pei Hong ◽  
Zhen Wang ◽  
Shaodong Liu ◽  
Baibing Cao ◽  
...  


Author(s):  
Z. JIN ◽  
D. A. BELL ◽  
F. G. WILKIE ◽  
D. G. LEAHY

Extracting pertinent and useful information from customers has long plagued the process of requirements elicitation. This paper presents a new approach to support the elicitation process. This approach combines various techniques for requirements elicitation which include model-based concept acquisition, goal-driven structured interview and concept reuse. Compared with the available approaches for requirements elicitation, the most significant feature of our approach is that it supports both the automation of interaction with customers by using domain terminology, not software terminology and the automated construction of application requirements models using model-based concept elicitation and concept reuse. The capacity of this approach comes from its rich knowledge which is clustered into several abstract levels.



2021 ◽  
Vol 2 (6) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jonas Sorgalla ◽  
Philip Wizenty ◽  
Florian Rademacher ◽  
Sabine Sachweh ◽  
Albert Zündorf

AbstractMicroservice architecture (MSA) denotes an increasingly popular architectural style in which business capabilities are wrapped into autonomously developable and deployable software components called microservices. Microservice applications are developed by multiple DevOps teams each owning one or more services. In this article, we explore the state of how DevOps teams in small and medium-sized organizations (SMOs) cope with MSA and how they can be supported. We show through a secondary analysis of an exploratory interview study comprising six cases, that the organizational and technological complexity resulting from MSA poses particular challenges for small and medium-sized organizations (SMOs). We apply model-driven engineering to address these challenges. As results of the second analysis, we identify the challenge areas of building and maintaining a common architectural understanding, and dealing with deployment technologies. To support DevOps teams of SMOs in coping with these challenges, we present a model-driven workflow based on LEMMA—the Language Ecosystem for Modeling Microservice Architecture. To implement the workflow, we extend LEMMA with the functionality to (i) generate models from API documentation; (ii) reference remote models owned by other teams; (iii) generate deployment specifications; and (iv) generate a visual representation of the overall architecture. We validate the model-driven workflow and our extensions to LEMMA through a case study showing that the added functionality to LEMMA can bring efficiency gains for DevOps teams. To develop best practices for applying our workflow to maximize efficiency in SMOs, we plan to conduct more empirical research in the field in the future.





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