Model driven product line engineeringcore asset and process implications

  1. Azanza Sese, Maider
Dirigée par:
  1. Óscar Díaz García Directeur/trice

Université de défendre: Universidad del País Vasco - Euskal Herriko Unibertsitatea

Fecha de defensa: 28 février 2011

Jury:
  1. Isidro Ramos Salavert President
  2. Arantza Irastorza Goñi Secrétaire
  3. Gerti Kappel Rapporteur
  4. Richard F. Paige Rapporteur
  5. Antonio Vallecillo Moreno Rapporteur
Département:
  1. Lenguajes y Sistemas Informáticos

Type: Thèses

Teseo: 306370 DIALNET lock_openADDI editor

Résumé

Reuse is at the heart of major improvements in productivity and quality in Software Engineering. Both Model Driven Engineering (MDE) and Software Product Line Engineering (SPLE) are software development paradigms that promote reuse. Specifically, they promote systematic reuse and a departure from craftsmanship towards an industrialization of the software development process. MDE and SPLE have established their benefits separately. Their combination, here called Model Driven Product Line Engineering (MDPLE), gathers together the advantages of both. Nevertheless, this blending requires MDE to be recasted in SPLE terms. This has implications on both the core assets and the software development process. The challenges are twofold: (i) models become central core assets from which products are obtained and (ii) the software development process needs to cater for the changes that SPLE and MDE introduce. This dissertation proposes a solution to the first challenge following a feature oriented approach, with an emphasis on reuse and early detection of inconsistencies. The second part is dedicated to assembly processes, a clear example of the complexity MDPLE introduces in software development processes. This work advocates for a new discipline inside the general software development process, i.e., the Assembly Plan Management, which raises the abstraction level and increases reuse in such processes. Different case studies illustrate the presented ideas.