spacer
spacer search

Software Engineering for Service-Oriented Overlay Computers
Software Engineering for Service-Oriented Overlay Computers

Search
spacer
 
header
Main Menu
 
Home arrow Publications arrow All Publications

SENSORIA All Publications Print

Copyright Information
The documents distributed by this server have been provided by the contributing authors as a means to ensure timely dissemination of scholarly and technical work on a noncommercial basis. Copyright and all rights therein are maintained by the authors or by other copyright holders, notwithstanding that they have offered their works here electronically. It is understood that all persons copying this information will adhere to the terms and constraints invoked by each author's copyright. These works may not be reposted without the explicit permission of the copyright holder.

show main publications


UML Extensions for Service-Oriented Systems


@MISC{,
  title = {{UML Extensions for Service-Oriented Systems}},
  author = {{Howard} {Foster} and {L\'aszl\'o} {G\"onczy} and {Nora} {Koch} and {Philip} {Mayer} and {Carlo} {Montangero} and {D\'aniel} {Varr\'o}},
  booktitle = {Rigorous Software Engineering for Service-Oriented Systems},
  abstract = {A trend in software engineering is towards greater modeldriven development. Models are used to document requirements, design results, and analysis in early phases of the development process. However, the aim of modelling is very often more ambitious as models are used for automatic generation in so-called model-driven engineering approaches. The relevance of models leads to the need of both, high-level domain specfi c modelling languages (DSML), and metamodels which are the basis for the de nition of model transformations and code generation. For the service-oriented computing domain we developed within the Sensoria project a DSML for building and transforming SOA models. This DSML is de ned as a family of UML pro les, which complement the SoaML pro le for the speci cation of SOAs structure. Our family of pro les focus on orchestration of services, service-level agreements, nonfunctional properties of services, implementation of service modes and service deployment.},
  series = {LNCS},
  year = {2010},
}

spacer

The Sensoria Project Website
2005 - 2010
spacer