Adaptation and Abstract Runtime Models

May 17, 2018 Β· Declared Dead Β· πŸ› International Symposium on Software Engineering for Adaptive and Self-Managing Systems

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Authors Thomas Vogel, Holger Giese arXiv ID 1805.07397 Category cs.SE: Software Engineering Citations 94 Venue International Symposium on Software Engineering for Adaptive and Self-Managing Systems Last Checked 3 months ago
Abstract
Runtime adaptability is often a crucial requirement for today's complex software systems. Several approaches use an architectural model as a runtime representation of a managed system for monitoring, reasoning and performing adaptation. To ease the causal connection between a system and a model, these models are often closely related to the implementation and at a rather low level of abstraction. This makes them as complex as the implementation and it impedes reusability and extensibility of autonomic managers. Moreover, the models often do not cover different concerns, like security or performance, and therefore they do not support several self-management capabilities at once. In this paper we propose a model-driven approach that provides multiple architectural runtime models at different levels of abstraction as a basis for adaptation. Each runtime model abstracts from the underlying system and platform leveraging reusability and extensibility of managers that work on these models. Moreover, each model focuses on a specific concern which simplifies the work of autonomic managers. The different models are maintained automatically at runtime using model-driven engineering techniques that also reduce development efforts. Our approach has been implemented for the broadly adopted Enterprise Java Beans component standard and its application is presented in a self-healing scenario requiring structural adaptation.
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