Quality of service engineering with UML, .NET, and CORBA

The concern for non-functional properties of software components and distributed applications has increased significantly in recent years. Non-functional properties are often subsumed under the term Quality of Service (QoS). It refers to quality aspects of a software component or service such as rea...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in25th International Conference on Software Engineering, 2003. Proceedings pp. 759 - 760
Main Authors Weis, T., Ulbrich, A., Geihs, K.
Format Conference Proceeding
LanguageEnglish
Published IEEE 2003
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Online AccessGet full text
ISBN076951877X
9780769518770
ISSN0270-5257
DOI10.1109/ICSE.2003.1201274

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Summary:The concern for non-functional properties of software components and distributed applications has increased significantly in recent years. Non-functional properties are often subsumed under the term Quality of Service (QoS). It refers to quality aspects of a software component or service such as real-time response guarantees, availability and fault-tolerance, the degree of data consistency, the precision of some computation, or the level of security. Consequently, the specification and implementation of QoS mechanisms has become an important concern in the engineering of distributed applications. In this tutorial the attendees will learn how non-functional requirements can be engineered in a systematic way into applications on top of distribution platforms such as CORBA and .NET The tutorial focuses on two major subjects areas: (1) Specification of QoS properties and (2) implementation of QoS mechanisms in middleware. We present a comprehensive, model-driven approach. It starts with a platform-independent model (PIM) in UML that captures the application QoS requirements. This model is mapped by a tool to a platform-specific model (PSM) tailored for a specific middleware, which is extended with the corresponding QoS mechanisms. Finally, the PSM is translated to code. Participants in this tutorial will get a thorough understanding of general QoS requirements, QoS modeling alternatives and QoS mechanism integration in respect to popular distributed object middleware. Furthermore, we will discuss the pros and cons of CORBA and .NET for QoS engineering. A tool will be demonstrated that eases substantially the modeling stages and the code generation.
ISBN:076951877X
9780769518770
ISSN:0270-5257
DOI:10.1109/ICSE.2003.1201274