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1.
This paper presents a methodology for estimating users’ opinion of the quality of a software product. Users’ opinion changes with time as they progressively become more acquainted with the software product. In this paper, we study the dynamics of users’ opinion and offer a method for assessing users’ final perception, based on measurements in the early stages of product release. The paper also presents methods for collecting users’ opinion and from the derived data, shows how their initial belief state for the quality of the product is formed. It adapts aspects of Belief Revision theory in order to present a way of estimating users’ opinion, subsequently formed after their opinion revisions. This estimation is achieved by using the initial measurements and without having to conduct surveys frequently. It reports the correlation that users tend to infer among quality characteristics and represents this correlation through a determination of a set of constraints between the scores of each quality characteristic. Finally, this paper presents a fast and automated way of forming users’ new belief state for the quality of a product after examining their opinion revisions. Dimitris Stavrinoudis received his degree in Computer Engineering from Patras University and is a Ph.D. student of Computer Engineering and Informatics Department. He worked as a senior computer engineer and researcher at the R.A. Computer Technology Institute. He has participated in research and development projects in the areas of software engineering, databases and educational technologies. Currently, he works at the Hellenic Open University. His research interests include software quality, software metrics and measurements. Michalis Xenos received his degree and Ph.D. in Computer Engineering from Patras University. He is a Lecturer in the Informatics Department of the School of Sciences and Technology of the Hellenic Open University. He also works as a researcher in the Computer Technology Institute of Patras and has participated in over 15 research and development projects in the areas of software engineering and IT development management. His research interests include, inter alia, Software Engineering and Educational Technologies. He is the author of 6 books in Greek and over 30 papers in international journals and conferences. Pavlos Peppas received his B.Eng. in Computer Engineering from Patras University (1988), and his Ph.D. in Computer Science from Sydney University (1994). He joined Macquarie University, Sydney, as a lecturer in September 1993, and was promoted to a senior lecturer in October 1998. In January 2000, he took up an appointment at Intrasoft, Athens, where he worked as a senior specialist in the Data Warehousing department. He joint Athens Information Technology in February 2003 as a senior researcher, and since November 2003 he is an associate professor at the Dept of Business Administration at the University of Patras. He also holds an adjunct associate professorship at the School of Computer Science and Engineering at the University of New South Wales. His research interests lie primarily within the area of Artificial Intelligence, and more specifically in logic-based approaches to Knowledge Representation and Reasoning with application in robotics, software engineering, organizational knowledge management, and the semantic web. Dimitris Christodoulakis received his degree in Mathematics from the University of Athens and his Ph.D. in Informatics from the University of Bonn. He was a researcher at the National Informatics Centre of Germany. He is a Professor and Vice President of Computer Engineering and Informatics Department of Patras University. Scientific Coordinator in many research and development projects in the followings sections: Knowledge and Data Base Systems, Very large volume information storage, Hypertext, Natural Language Technology for Modern Greek. Author and co-author in many articles published in international conferences. Editor in proceedings of conventions. Responsible for proofing tools development for Microsoft Corp. He is Vice Director in the Research Academic Computer Technology Institute (RACTI).  相似文献   

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Advances in wireless and mobile computing environments allow a mobile user to access a wide range of applications. For example, mobile users may want to retrieve data about unfamiliar places or local life styles related to their location. These queries are called location-dependent queries. Furthermore, a mobile user may be interested in getting the query results repeatedly, which is called location-dependent continuous querying. This continuous query emanating from a mobile user may retrieve information from a single-zone (single-ZQ) or from multiple neighbouring zones (multiple-ZQ). We consider the problem of handling location-dependent continuous queries with the main emphasis on reducing communication costs and making sure that the user gets correct current-query result. The key contributions of this paper include: (1) Proposing a hierarchical database framework (tree architecture and supporting continuous query algorithm) for handling location-dependent continuous queries. (2) Analysing the flexibility of this framework for handling queries related to single-ZQ or multiple-ZQ and propose intelligent selective placement of location-dependent databases. (3) Proposing an intelligent selective replication algorithm to facilitate time- and space-efficient processing of location-dependent continuous queries retrieving single-ZQ information. (4) Demonstrating, using simulation, the significance of our intelligent selective placement and selective replication model in terms of communication cost and storage constraints, considering various types of queries. Manish Gupta received his B.E. degree in Electrical Engineering from Govindram Sakseria Institute of Technology & Sciences, India, in 1997 and his M.S. degree in Computer Science from University of Texas at Dallas in 2002. He is currently working toward his Ph.D. degree in the Department of Computer Science at University of Texas at Dallas. His current research focuses on AI-based software synthesis and testing. His other research interests include mobile computing, aspect-oriented programming and model checking. Manghui Tu received a Bachelor degree of Science from Wuhan University, P.R. China, in 1996, and a Master's Degree in Computer Science from the University of Texas at Dallas 2001. He is currently working toward the Ph.D. degree in the Department of Computer Science at the University of Texas at Dallas. Mr. Tu's research interests include distributed systems, wireless communications, mobile computing, and reliability and performance analysis. His Ph.D. research work focuses on the dependent and secure data replication and placement issues in network-centric systems. Latifur R. Khan has been an Assistant Professor of Computer Science department at University of Texas at Dallas since September 2000. He received his Ph.D. and M.S. degrees in Computer Science from University of Southern California (USC) in August 2000 and December 1996, respectively. He obtained his B.Sc. degree in Computer Science and Engineering from Bangladesh University of Engineering and Technology, Dhaka, Bangladesh, in November of 1993. Professor Khan is currently supported by grants from the National Science Foundation (NSF), Texas Instruments, Alcatel, USA, and has been awarded the Sun Equipment Grant. Dr. Khan has more than 50 articles, book chapters and conference papers focusing in the areas of database systems, multimedia information management and data mining in bio-informatics and intrusion detection. Professor Khan has also served as a referee for database journals, conferences (e.g. IEEE TKDE, KAIS, ADL, VLDB) and he is currently serving as a program committee member for the 11th ACM SIGKDD International Conference on Knowledge Discovery and Data Mining (SIGKDD2005), ACM 14th Conference on Information and Knowledge Management (CIKM 2005), International Conference on Database and Expert Systems Applications DEXA 2005 and International Conference on Cooperative Information Systems (CoopIS 2005), and is program chair of ACM SIGKDD International Workshop on Multimedia Data Mining, 2004. Farokh Bastani received the B.Tech. degree in Electrical Engineering from the Indian Institute of Technology, Bombay, and the M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in Computer Science from the University of California, Berkeley. He is currently a Professor of Computer Science at the University of Texas at Dallas. Dr. Bastani's research interests include various aspects of the ultrahigh dependable systems, especially automated software synthesis and testing, embedded real-time process-control and telecommunications systems and high-assurance systems engineering. Dr. Bastani was the Editor-in-Chief of the IEEE Transactions on Knowledge and Data Engineering (IEEE-TKDE). He is currently an emeritus EIC of IEEE-TKDE and is on the editorial board of the International Journal of Artificial Intelligence Tools, the International Journal of Knowledge and Information Systems and the Springer-Verlag series on Knowledge and Information Management. He was the program cochair of the 1997 IEEE Symposium on Reliable Distributed Systems, 1998 IEEE International Symposium on Software Reliability Engineering, 1999 IEEE Knowledge and Data Engineering Workshop, 1999 International Symposium on Autonomous Decentralised Systems, and the program chair of the 1995 IEEE International Conference on Tools with Artificial Intelligence. He has been on the program and steering committees of several conferences and workshops and on the editorial boards of the IEEE Transactions on Software Engineering, IEEE Transactions on Knowledge and Data Engineering and the Oxford University Press High Integrity Systems Journal. I-Ling Yen received her B.S. degree from Tsing-Hua University, Taiwan, and her M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in Computer Science from the University of Houston. She is currently an Associate Professor of Computer Science at University of Texas at Dallas. Dr. Yen's research interests include fault-tolerant computing, security systems and algorithms, distributed systems, Internet technologies, E-commerce and self-stabilising systems. She has published over 100 technical papers in these research areas and received many research awards from NSF, DOD, NASA and several industry companies. She has served as Program Committee member for many conferences and Program Chair/Cochair for the IEEE Symposium on Application-Specific Software and System Engineering & Technology, IEEE High Assurance Systems Engineering Symposium, IEEE International Computer Software and Applications Conference, and IEEE International Symposium on Autonomous Decentralized Systems. She has also served as a guest editor for a theme issue of IEEE Computer devoted to high-assurance systems.  相似文献   

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This paper presents a metamodel for modeling system features and relationships between features. The underlying idea of this metamodel is to employ features as first-class entities in the problem space of software and to improve the customization of software by explicitly specifying both static and dynamic dependencies between system features. In this metamodel, features are organized as hierarchy structures by the refinement relationships, static dependencies between features are specified by the constraint relationships, and dynamic dependencies between features are captured by the interaction relationships. A first-order logic based method is proposed to formalize constraints and to verify constraints and customization. This paper also presents a framework for interaction classification, and an informal mapping between interactions and constraints through constraint semantics. Hong Mei received the BSc and MSc degrees in computer science from the Nanjing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics (NUAA), China, in 1984 and 1987, respectively, and the PhD degree in computer science from the Shanghai Jiao Tong University in 1992. He is currently a professor of Computer Science at the Peking University, China. His current research interests include Software Engineering and Software Engineering Environment, Software Reuse and Software Component Technology, Distributed Object Technology, and Programming Language. He has published more than 100 technical papers. Wei Zhang received the BSc in Engineering Thermophysics and the MSc in Computer Science from the Nanjing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics (NUAA), China, in 1999 and 2002, respectively. He is currently a PhD student at the School of Electronics Engineering and Computer Science of the Peking University, China. His research interests include feature-oriented requirements modeling, feature-driven software architecture design and feature-oriented software reuse. Haiyan Zhao received both the BSc and the MSc degree in Computer Science from the Peking Univeristy, China, and the Ph.D degree in Information Engineering from the University of Tokyo, Japan. She is currently an associate professor of Computer Science at the Peking University, China. Her research interests include Software Reuse, Domain Engineering, Domain Specific Languange and Program Transformation.  相似文献   

5.
Software architecture evaluation involves evaluating different architecture design alternatives against multiple quality-attributes. These attributes typically have intrinsic conflicts and must be considered simultaneously in order to reach a final design decision. AHP (Analytic Hierarchy Process), an important decision making technique, has been leveraged to resolve such conflicts. AHP can help provide an overall ranking of design alternatives. However it lacks the capability to explicitly identify the exact tradeoffs being made and the relative size of these tradeoffs. Moreover, the ranking produced can be sensitive such that the smallest change in intermediate priority weights can alter the final order of design alternatives. In this paper, we propose several in-depth analysis techniques applicable to AHP to identify critical tradeoffs and sensitive points in the decision process. We apply our method to an example of a real-world distributed architecture presented in the literature. The results are promising in that they make important decision consequences explicit in terms of key design tradeoffs and the architecture's capability to handle future quality attribute changes. These expose critical decisions which are otherwise too subtle to be detected in standard AHP results. Liming Zhu is a PHD candidate in the School of Computer Science and Engineering at University of New South Wales. He is also a member of the Empirical Software Engineering Group at National ICT Australia (NICTA). He obtained his BSc from Dalian University of Technology in China. After moving to Australia, he obtained his MSc in computer science from University of New South Wales. His principle research interests include software architecture evaluation and empirical software engineering. Aybüke Aurum is a senior lecturer at the School of Information Systems, Technology and Management, University of New South Wales. She received her BSc and MSc in geological engineering, and MEngSc and PhD in computer science. She also works as a visiting researcher in National ICT, Australia (NICTA). Dr. Aurum is one of the editors of “Managing Software Engineering Knowledge”, “Engineering and Managing Software Requirements” and “Value-Based Software Engineering” books. Her research interests include management of software development process, software inspection, requirements engineering, decision making and knowledge management in software development. She is on the editorial boards of Requirements Engineering Journal and Asian Academy Journal of Management. Ian Gorton is a Senior Researcher at National ICT Australia. Until Match 2004 he was Chief Architect in Information Sciences and Engineering at the US Department of Energy's Pacific Northwest National Laboratory. Previously he has worked at Microsoft and IBM, as well as in other research positions. His interests include software architectures, particularly those for large-scale, high-performance information systems that use commercial off-the-shelf (COTS) middleware technologies. He received a PhD in Computer Science from Sheffield Hallam University. Dr. Ross Jeffery is Professor of Software Engineering in the School of Computer Science and Engineering at UNSW and Program Leader in Empirical Software Engineering in National ICT Australia Ltd. (NICTA). His current research interests are in software engineering process and product modeling and improvement, electronic process guides and software knowledge management, software quality, software metrics, software technical and management reviews, and software resource modeling and estimation. His research has involved over fifty government and industry organizations over a period of 15 years and has been funded from industry, government and universities. He has co-authored four books and over one hundred and twenty research papers. He has served on the editorial board of the IEEE Transactions on Software Engineering, and the Wiley International Series in Information Systems and he is Associate Editor of the Journal of Empirical Software Engineering. He is a founding member of the International Software Engineering Research Network (ISERN). He was elected Fellow of the Australian Computer Society for his contribution to software engineering research.  相似文献   

6.
An empirical study of predicting software faults with case-based reasoning   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The resources allocated for software quality assurance and improvement have not increased with the ever-increasing need for better software quality. A targeted software quality inspection can detect faulty modules and reduce the number of faults occurring during operations. We present a software fault prediction modeling approach with case-based reasoning (CBR), a part of the computational intelligence field focusing on automated reasoning processes. A CBR system functions as a software fault prediction model by quantifying, for a module under development, the expected number of faults based on similar modules that were previously developed. Such a system is composed of a similarity function, the number of nearest neighbor cases used for fault prediction, and a solution algorithm. The selection of a particular similarity function and solution algorithm may affect the performance accuracy of a CBR-based software fault prediction system. This paper presents an empirical study investigating the effects of using three different similarity functions and two different solution algorithms on the prediction accuracy of our CBR system. The influence of varying the number of nearest neighbor cases on the performance accuracy is also explored. Moreover, the benefits of using metric-selection procedures for our CBR system is also evaluated. Case studies of a large legacy telecommunications system are used for our analysis. It is observed that the CBR system using the Mahalanobis distance similarity function and the inverse distance weighted solution algorithm yielded the best fault prediction. In addition, the CBR models have better performance than models based on multiple linear regression. Taghi M. Khoshgoftaar is a professor of the Department of Computer Science and Engineering, Florida Atlantic University and the Director of the Empirical Software Engineering Laboratory. His research interests are in software engineering, software metrics, software reliability and quality engineering, computational intelligence, computer performance evaluation, data mining, and statistical modeling. He has published more than 200 refereed papers in these areas. He has been a principal investigator and project leader in a number of projects with industry, government, and other research-sponsoring agencies. He is a member of the Association for Computing Machinery, the IEEE Computer Society, and IEEE Reliability Society. He served as the general chair of the 1999 International Symposium on Software Reliability Engineering (ISSRE’99), and the general chair of the 2001 International Conference on Engineering of Computer Based Systems. Also, he has served on technical program committees of various international conferences, symposia, and workshops. He has served as North American editor of the Software Quality Journal, and is on the editorial boards of the journals Empirical Software Engineering, Software Quality, and Fuzzy Systems. Naeem Seliya received the M.S. degree in Computer Science from Florida Atlantic University, Boca Raton, FL, USA, in 2001. He is currently a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of Computer Science and Engineering at Florida Atlantic University. His research interests include software engineering, computational intelligence, data mining, software measurement, software reliability and quality engineering, software architecture, computer data security, and network intrusion detection. He is a student member of the IEEE Computer Society and the Association for Computing Machinery.  相似文献   

7.
Timing constraints for radar tasks are usually specified in terms of the minimum and maximum temporal distance between successive radar dwells. We utilize the idea of feasible intervals for dealing with the temporal distance constraints. In order to increase the freedom that the scheduler can offer a high-level resource manager, we introduce a technique for nesting and interleaving dwells online while accounting for the energy constraint that radar systems need to satisfy. Further, in radar systems, the task set changes frequently and we advocate the use of finite horizon scheduling in order to avoid the pessimism inherent in schedulers that assume a task will execute forever. The combination of feasible intervals and online dwell packing allows modular schedule updates whereby portions of a schedule can be altered without affecting the entire schedule, hence reducing the complexity of the scheduler. Through extensive simulations we validate our claims of providing greater scheduling flexibility without compromising on performance when compared with earlier work based on templates constructed offline. We also evaluate the impact of two parameters in our scheduling approach: the template length (or the extent of dwell nesting and interleaving) and the length of the finite horizon. Sathish Gopalakrishnan is a visting scholar in the Department of Computer Science, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, where he defended his Ph.D. thesis in December 2005. He received an M.S. in Applied Mathematics from the University of Illinois in 2004 and a B.E. in Computer Science and Engineering from the University of Madras in 1999. Sathish’s research interests concern real-time and embedded systems, and the design of large-scale reliable systems. He received the best student paper award for his work on radar dwell scheduling at the Real-Time Systems Symposium 2004. Marco Caccamo graduated in computer engineering from the University of Pisa in 1997 and received the Ph.D. degree in computer engineering from the Scuola Superiore S. Anna in 2002. He is an Assistant Professor of the Department of Computer Science at the University of Illinois. His research interests include real-time operating systems, real-time scheduling and resource management, wireless sensor networks, and quality of service control in next generation digital infrastructures. He is recipient of the NSF CAREER Award (2003). He is a member of ACM and IEEE. Chi-Sheng Shih is currently an assistant professor at the Graduate Institute of Networking and Multimedia and Department of Computer Science and Information Engineering at National Taiwan University since February 2004. He received the B.S. in Engineering Science and M.S. in Computer Science from National Cheng Kung University in 1993 and 1995, respectively. In 2003, he received his Ph.D. in Computer Science from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. His main research interests are embedded systems, hardware/software codesign, real-time systems, and database systems. Specifically, his main research interests focus on real-time operating systems, real-time scheduling theory, embedded software, and software/hardware co-design for system-on-a-chip. Chang-Gun Lee received the B.S., M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in computer engineering from Seoul National University, Korea, in 1991, 1993 and 1998, respectively. He is currently an Assistant Professor in the Department of Electrical Engineering, Ohio State University, Columbus. Previously, he was a Research Scientist in the Department of Computer Science, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign from March 2000 to July 2002 and a Research Engineer in the Advanced Telecomm. Research Lab., LG Information & Communications, Ltd. from March 1998 to February 2000. His current research interests include real-time systems, complex embedded systems, QoS management, and wireless ad-hoc networks. Chang-Gun Lee is a member of the IEEE Computer Society. Lui Sha graduated with the Ph.D. degree from Carnegie-Mellon University in 1985. He was a Member and then a Senior Member of Technical Staff at Software Engineering Institute (SEI) from 1986 to 1998. Since Fall 1998, he has been a Professor of Computer Science at the University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign, and a Visiting Scientist of the SEI. He was the Chair of IEEE Real Time Systems Technical Committee from 1999 to 2000, and has served on its Executive Committee since 2001. He was a member of National Academy of Science’s study group on Software Dependability and Certification from 2004 to 2005, and is an IEEE Distinguished Visitor (2005 to 2007). Lui Sha is a Fellow of the IEEE and the ACM.  相似文献   

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The pairwise attribute noise detection algorithm   总被引:1,自引:3,他引:1  
Analyzing the quality of data prior to constructing data mining models is emerging as an important issue. Algorithms for identifying noise in a given data set can provide a good measure of data quality. Considerable attention has been devoted to detecting class noise or labeling errors. In contrast, limited research work has been devoted to detecting instances with attribute noise, in part due to the difficulty of the problem. We present a novel approach for detecting instances with attribute noise and demonstrate its usefulness with case studies using two different real-world software measurement data sets. Our approach, called Pairwise Attribute Noise Detection Algorithm (PANDA), is compared with a nearest neighbor, distance-based outlier detection technique (denoted DM) investigated in related literature. Since what constitutes noise is domain specific, our case studies uses a software engineering expert to inspect the instances identified by the two approaches to determine whether they actually contain noise. It is shown that PANDA provides better noise detection performance than the DM algorithm. Jason Van Hulse is a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of Computer Science and Engineering at Florida Atlantic University. His research interests include data mining and knowledge discovery, machine learning, computational intelligence and statistics. He is a student member of the IEEE and IEEE Computer Society. He received the M.A. degree in mathematics from Stony Brook University in 2000, and is currently Director, Decision Science at First Data Corporation. Taghi M. Khoshgoftaar is a professor at the Department of Computer Science and Engineering, Florida Atlantic University, and the director of the Empirical Software Engineering and Data Mining and Machine Learning Laboratories. His research interests are in software engineering, software metrics, software reliability and quality engineering, computational intelligence, computer performance evaluation, data mining, machine learning, and statistical modeling. He has published more than 300 refereed papers in these subjects. He has been a principal investigator and project leader in a number of projects with industry, government, and other research-sponsoring agencies. He is a member of the IEEE, the IEEE Computer Society, and IEEE Reliability Society. He served as the program chair and general chair of the IEEE International Conference on Tools with Artificial Intelligence in 2004 and 2005, respectively. Also, he has served on technical program committees of various international conferences, symposia, and workshops. He has served as North American editor of the Software Quality Journal, and is on the editorial boards of the journals Empirical Software Engineering, Software Quality, and Fuzzy Systems. Haiying Huang received the M.S. degree in computer engineeringfrom Florida Atlantic University, Boca Raton, Florida, USA, in 2002. She is currently a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of Computer Science and Engineering at Florida Atlantic University. Her research interests include software engineering, computational intelligence, data mining, software measurement, software reliability, and quality engineering.  相似文献   

10.
The simple least-significant-bit (LSB) substitution technique is the easiest way to embed secret data in the host image. To avoid image degradation of the simple LSB substitution technique, Wang et al. proposed a method using the substitution table to process image hiding. Later, Thien and Lin employed the modulus function to solve the same problem. In this paper, the proposed scheme combines the modulus function and the optimal substitution table to improve the quality of the stego-image. Experimental results show that our method can achieve better quality of the stego-image than Thien and Lin’s method does. The text was submitted by the authors in English. Chin-Shiang Chan received his BS degree in Computer Science in 1999 from the National Cheng Chi University, Taipei, Taiwan and the MS degree in Computer Science and Information Engineering in 2001 from the National Chung Cheng University, ChiaYi, Taiwan. He is currently a Ph.D. student in Computer Science and Information Engineering at the National Chung Cheng University, Chiayi, Taiwan. His research fields are image hiding and image compression. Chin-Chen Chang received his BS degree in applied mathematics in 1977 and his MS degree in computer and decision sciences in 1979, both from the National Tsing Hua University, Hsinchu, Taiwan. He received his Ph.D. in computer engineering in 1982 from the National Chiao Tung University, Hsinchu, Taiwan. During the academic years of 1980–1983, he was on the faculty of the Department of Computer Engineering at the National Chiao Tung University. From 1983–1989, he was on the faculty of the Institute of Applied Mathematics, National Chung Hsing University, Taichung, Taiwan. From 1989 to 2004, he has worked as a professor in the Institute of Computer Science and Information Engineering at National Chung Cheng University, Chiayi, Taiwan. Since 2005, he has worked as a professor in the Department of Information Engineering and Computer Science at Feng Chia University, Taichung, Taiwan. Dr. Chang is a Fellow of IEEE, a Fellow of IEE and a member of the Chinese Language Computer Society, the Chinese Institute of Engineers of the Republic of China, and the Phi Tau Phi Society of the Republic of China. His research interests include computer cryptography, data engineering, and image compression. Yu-Chen Hu received his Ph.D. degree in Computer Science and Information Engineering from the Department of Computer Science and Information Engineering, National Chung Cheng University, Chiayi, Taiwan in 1999. Dr. Hu is currently an assistant professor in the Department of Computer Science and Information Engineering, Providence University, Sha-Lu, Taiwan. He is a member of the SPIE society and a member of the IEEE society. He is also a member of the Phi Tau Phi Society of the Republic of China. His research interests include image and data compression, information hiding, and image processing.  相似文献   

11.
A high performance communication facility, called theGigaE PM, has been designed and implemented for parallel applications on clusters of computers using a Gigabit Ethernet. The GigaE PM provides not only a reliable high bandwidth and low latency communication, but also supports existing network protocols such as TCP/IP. A reliable communication mechanism for a parallel application is implemented on the firmware on a NIC while existing network protocols are handled by an operating system kernel. A prototype system has been implemented using an Essential Communications Gigabit Ethernet card. The performance results show that a 58.3 μs round trip time for a four byte user message, and 56.7 MBytes/sec bandwidth for a 1,468 byte message have been achieved on Intel Pentium II 400 MHz PCs. We have implemented MPICH-PM on top of the GigaE PM, and evaluated the NAS parallel benchmark performance. The results show that the IS class S performance on the GigaE PM is 1.8 times faster than that on TCP/IP. Shinji Sumimoto: He is a Senior Researcher of Parallel and Distributed System Software Laboratory at Real World Computing Partnership, JAPAN. He received BS degree in electrical engineering from Doshisha University. His research interest include parallel and distributed systems, real-time systems, and high performance communication facilities. He is a member of Information Processing Society of Japan. Hiroshi Tezuka: He is a Senior Researcher of Parallel and Distributed System Software Laboratory at Real World Computing Partnership, JAPAN. His research interests include real-time systems and operating system kernel. He is a member of the Information Processing Society of Japan, and Japan Society for Software Science and Technology. Atsushi Hori, Ph.D.: He is a Senior Researcher of Parallel and Distributed System Software Laboratory at Real World Computing Partnership, JAPAN. His current research interests include parallel operating system. He received B.S. and M.S. degrees in Electrical Engineering from Waseda University, and received Ph.D. from the University of Tokyo. He worked as a researcher in Mitsubishi Research Institute from 1981 to 1992. Hiroshi Harada: He is a Senior Researcher of Parallel and Distributed System Software Laboratory at Real World Computing Partnership, JAPAN. His research interests include distributed/parallel systems and distributed shared memory. He received BS degree in physics from Science University of Tokyo. He is a member of ACM and Information Processing Society of Japan. Toshiyuki Takahashi: He is a Researcher at Real World Computing Partnership since 1998. He received his B.S. and M.S. from the Department of Information Sciences of Science University of Tokyo in 1993 and 1995. He was a student of the Information Science Department of the University of Tokyo from 1995 to 1998. His current interests are in meta-level architecture for programming languages and high-performance software technologies. He is a member of Information Processing Society of Japan. Yutaka Ishikawa, Ph.D.: He is the chief of Parallel and Distributed System Software Laboratory at Real World Computing Partnership, JAPAN. He is currently temporary retirement from Electrotechnical Laboratory, MITI. His research interests include distributed/parallel systems, object-oriented programming languages, and real-time systems. He received the B.S., M.S. and Ph.D degrees in electrical engineering from Keio University. He is a member of the IEEE Computer Society, ACM, Information Processing Society of Japan, and Japan Society for Software Science and Technology.  相似文献   

12.
A Model for Slicing JAVA Programs Hierarchically   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3       下载免费PDF全文
Program slicing can be effectively used to debug, test, analyze, understand and maintain objectoriented software. In this paper, a new slicing model is proposed to slice Java programs based on their inherent hierarchical feature. The main idea of hierarchical slicing is to slice programs in a stepwise way, from package level, to class level, method level, and finally up to statement level. The stepwise slicing algorithm and the related graph reachability algorithms are presented, the architecture of the Java program Analyzing TOol (JATO) based on hierarchical slicing model is provided, the applications and a small case study are also discussed.  相似文献   

13.
This paper addresses the problem of resource allocation for distributed real-time periodic tasks, operating in environments that undergo unpredictable changes and that defy the specification of meaningful worst-case execution times. These tasks are supplied by input data originating from various environmental workload sources. Rather than using worst-case execution times (WCETs) to describe the CPU usage of the tasks, we assume here that execution profiles are given to describe the running time of the tasks in terms of the size of the input data of each workload source. The objective of resource allocation is to produce an initial allocation that is robust against fluctuations in the environmental parameters. We try to maximize the input size (workload) that can be handled by the system, and hence to delay possible (costly) reallocations as long as possible. We present an approximation algorithm based on first-fit and binary search that we call FFBS. As we show here, the first-fit algorithm produces solutions that are often close to optimal. In particular, we show analytically that FFBS is guaranteed to produce a solution that is at least 41% of optimal, asymptotically, under certain reasonable restrictions on the running times of tasks in the system. Moreover, we show that if at most 12% of the system utilization is consumed by input independent tasks (e.g., constant time tasks), then FFBS is guaranteed to produce a solution that is at least 33% of optimal, asymptotically. Moreover, we present simulations to compare FFBS approximation algorithm with a set of standard (local search) heuristics such as hill-climbing, simulated annealing, and random search. The results suggest that FFBS, in combination with other local improvement strategies, may be a reasonable approach for resource allocation in dynamic real-time systems. David Juedes is a tenured associate professor and assistant chair for computer science in the School of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at Ohio University. Dr. Juedes received his Ph.D. in Computer Science from Iowa State University in 1994, and his main research interests are algorithm design and analysis, the theory of computation, algorithms for real-time systems, and bioinformatics. Dr. Juedes has published numerous conference and journal papers and has acted as a referee for IEEE Transactions on Computers, Algorithmica, SIAM Journal on Computing, Theoretical Computer Science, Information and Computation, Information Processing Letters, and other conferences and journals. Dazhang Gu is a software architect and researcher at Pegasus Technologies (NeuCo), Inc. He received his Ph.D. in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science from Ohio University in 2005. His main research interests are real-time systems, distributed systems, and resource optimization. He has published conference and journal papers on these subjects and has refereed for the Journal of Real-Time Systems, IEEE Transactions on Computers, and IEEE Transactions on Parallel and Distributed Systems among others. He also served as a session chair and publications chair for several conferences. Frank Drews is an Assistant Professor of Electical Engineering and Computer Science at Ohio Unversity. Dr. Drews received his Ph.D. in Computer Science from the Clausthal Unversity of Technolgy in Germany in 2002. His main research interests are resource management for operating systems and real-time systems, and bioinformatics. Dr. Drews has numerous publications in conferences and journals and has served as a reviewer for IEEE Transactions on Computers, the Journal of Systems and Software, and other conferences and Journals. He was Publication Chair for the OCCBIO’06 conference, Guest Editor of a Special Issue of the Journal of Systems and Software on “Dynamic Resource Management for Distributed Real-Time Systems”, organizer of special tracks at the IEEE IPDPS WPDRTS workshops in 2005 and 2006. Klaus Ecker received his Ph.D. in Theoretical Physics from the University of Graz, Austria, and his Dr. habil. in Computer Science from the University of Bonn. Since 1978 he is professor in the Department of Computer Science at the Clausthal University of Technology, Germany, and since 2005 he is visiting professor at the Ohio University. His research interests are parallel processing and theory of scheduling, especially in real time systems, and bioinformatics. Prof. Ecker published widely in the above mentioned areas in well reputed journals and proceedings of international conferences as well. He is also the author of two monographs on scheduling theory. Since 1981 he is organizing annually international workshops on parallel processing. He is associate editor of Real Time Systems, and member of the German Gesellschaft fuer Informatik (GI) and of the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM). Lonnie R. Welch received a Ph.D. in Computer and Information Science from the Ohio State University. Currently, he is the Stuckey Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at Ohio University. Dr. Welch performs research in the areas of real-time systems, distributed computing and bioinformatics. His research has been sponsored by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, the Navy, NASA, the National Science Foundation and the Army. Dr. Welch has twenty years of research experience in the area of high performance computing. In his graduate work at Ohio State University, he developed a high performance 3-D graphics rendering algorithm, and he invented a parallel virtual machine for object-oriented software. For the past 15 years his research has focused on middleware and optimization algorithms for high performance computing. His research has produced three successive generations of adaptive resource management (RM) middleware for high performance real-time systems. The project has resulted in two patents and more than 150 publications. Professor Welch also collaborates on diabetes research with faculty at Edison Biotechnology Institute and on genomics research with faculty in the Department of Environmental and Plant Biology at Ohio University. Dr. Welch is a member of the editorial boards of IEEE Transactions on Computers, The Journal of Scalable Computing: Practice and Experience, and The International Journal of Computers and Applications. He is also the founder of the International Workshop on Parallel and Distributed Real-time Systems and of the Ohio Collaborative Conference on Bioinformatics. Silke Schomann graduated in 2003 with a M.Sc. in Computer Science from Clausthal University Of Technology, where she has been working as a scientific assistant since then. She is currently working on her Ph.D. thesis in computer science at the same university.  相似文献   

14.
Designs almost always require tradeoffs between competing design choices to meet system requirements. We present a framework for evaluating design choices with respect to meeting competing requirements. Specifically, we develop a model to estimate the performance of a UML design subject to changing levels of security and fault-tolerance. This analysis gives us a way to identify design solutions that are infeasible. Multi-criteria decision making techniques are applied to evaluate the remaining feasible alternatives. The method is illustrated with two examples: a small sensor network and a system for controlling traffic lights. Dr. Anneliese Amschler Andrews is Professor and Chair of the Department of Computer Science at the University of Denver. Before that she was the Huie Rogers Endowed Chair in Software Engineering at Washington State University. Dr. Andrews is the author of a text book and over 130 articles in the area of Software Engineering, particularly software testing and maintenance. Dr. Andrews holds an MS and PhD from Duke University and a Dipl.-Inf. from the Technical University of Karlsruhe. She served as Editor-in-Chief of the IEEE Transactions on Software Engineering. She has also served on several other editorial boards including the IEEE Transactions on Reliability, the Empirical Software Engineering Journal, the Software Quality Journal, the Journal of Information Science and Technology, and the Journal of Software Maintenance. She was Director of the Colorado Advanced Software Institute from 1995 to 2002. CASI's mission was to support technology transfer research related to software through collaborations between industry and academia. Ed Mancebo studied software engineering at Milwaukee School of Engineering and computer science at Washington State University. His masters thesis explored applying systematic decision making methods to software engineering problems. He is currently a software developer at Amazon.com. Dr. Per Runeson is a professor in software engineering at Lund University, Sweden. His research interests include methods to facilitate, measure and manage aspects of software quality. He received a PhD from Lund University in 1998 and has industrial experience as a consulting expert. He is a member of the editorial board of Empirical Software Engineering and several program committees, and currently has a senior researcher position funded by the Swedish Research Council. Robert France is currently a Full Professor in the Department of Computer Science at Colorado State University. His research interests are in the area of Software Engineering, in particular formal specification techniques, software modeling techniques, design patterns, and domain-specific modeling languages. He is an Editor-in-Chief of the Springer journal on Software and System Modeling (SoSyM), and is a Steering Committee member and past Steering Committee Chair of the MoDELS/UML conference series. He was also a member of the revision task forces for the UML 1.x standards.  相似文献   

15.
In this paper we introduce the logic programming languageDisjunctive Chronolog which combines the programming paradigms of temporal and disjunctive logic programming. Disjunctive Chronolog is capable of expressing dynamic behaviour as well as uncertainty, two notions that are very common in a variety of real systems. We present the minimal temporal model semantics and the fixpoint semantics for the new programming language and demonstrate their equivalence. We also show how proof procedures developed for disjunctive logic programs can be easily extended to apply to Disjunctive Chronolog programs. Manolis Gergatsoulis, Ph.D.: He received his B.Sc. in Physics in 1983, the M.Sc. and the Ph.D. degrees in Computer Science in 1986 and 1995 respectively all from the University of Athens, Greece. Since 1996 he is a Research Associate in the Institute of Informatics and Telecommunications, NCSR ‘Demokritos’, Athens. His research interests include logic and temporal programming, program transformations and synthesis, as well as theory of programming languages. Panagiotis Rondogiannis, Ph.D.: He received his B.Sc. from the Department of Computer Engineering and Informatics, University of Patras, Greece, in 1989, and his M.Sc. and Ph.D. from the Department of Computer Science, University of Victoria, Canada, in 1991 and 1994 respectively. From 1995 to 1996 he served in the Greek army. From 1996 to 1997 he was a visiting professor in the Department of Computer Science, University of Ioannina, Greece, and since 1997 he is a Lecturer in the same Department. In January 2000 he was elected Assistant Professor in the Department of Informatics at the University of Athens. His research interests include functional, logic and temporal programming, as well as theory of programming languages. Themis Panayiotopoulos, Ph.D.: He received his Diploma on Electrical Engineering from the Department of Electrical Engineering, National Technical Univesity of Athens, in 1984, and his Ph.D. on Artificial Intelligence from the above mentioned department in 1989. From 1991 to 1994 he was a visiting professor at the Department of Mathematics, University of the Aegean, Samos, Greece and a Research Associate at the Institute of Informatics and Telecommunications of “Democritos” National Research Center. Since 1995 he is an Assistant Prof. at the Department of Computer Science, University of Piraeus. His research interests include temporal programming, logic programming, expert systems and intelligent agent architectures.  相似文献   

16.
Metal-level compositions of object logic programs are naturally implemented by means of meta-programming techniques. Metainterpreters defining program compositions however suffer from a computational overhead that is due partly to the interpretation layer present in all meta-programs, and partly to the specific interpretation layer needed to deal with program compositions. We show that meta-interpreters implementing compositions of object programs can be fruitfully specialised w.r.t. meta-level queries of the form Demo (E, G), where E denotes a program expression and G denotes a (partially instantiated) object level query. More precisely, we describe the design and implementation of declarative program specialiser that suitably transforms such meta-interpreters so as to sensibly reduce — if not to completely remove — the overhead due to the handling of program compositions. In many cases the specialiser succeeds in eliminating also the overhead due to meta-interpretation. Antonio Brogi, Ph.D.: He is currently assistant professor in the Department of Computer Science at the University of Pisa, Italy. He received his Laurea Degree in Computer Science (1987) and his Ph. D. in Computer Science (1993) from the University of Pisa. His research interests include programming language design and semantics, logic programming, deductive databases, and software coordination. Simone Contiero: He is currently a Ph. D. student at the Department of Computer Science, University of Pisa (Italy). He received his Laurea Degree in Computer Science from the University of Pisa in 1994. His research interests are in high-level programming languages, metaprogramming and logic-based coordination of software.  相似文献   

17.
Singularity Analysis of Geometric Constraint Systems   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
Singularity analysis in an important subject of the geometric constraint satisfaction problem.In this paper,three kinds of singularities are described and corresponding identifcation methods are presented for both under0constrained systems and over-constrained systems,Another special but common singularity for under-constrained geometric systems,pseudo-singularity,is analyzed.Pseudo-singularity is caused by a variety of constraint mathching of under-constrained systems and can be removed by improving constraint distribution.To avoid pseudo-singularity and decide redundant constraints adaptively,a differentiaiton algorithm is proposed in the paper.Its corrctness and effciency have been validated through its practical applications in a 2D/3D geometric constraint solver CBA.  相似文献   

18.
Summary In this paper we construct a formal specification of the problem of synchronizing asynchronous processes under strong fairness. We prove that strong interaction fairness is impossible for binary (and hence for multiway) interactions and strong process fairness is impossible for multiway interactions. Yih-Kuen Tsay received his B.S. degree form National Taiwan University in 1984 and his M.S. degree from UCLA in 1989. He is currently a Ph.D. candidate in the UCLA Computer Science Department. His research interests include distributed algorithms, fault-tolerant systems, and specification and verification of concurrent programs. Rajive L. Bagrodia received the B. Tech. degree in Electrical Engineering from the Indian Institute of Technology, Bombay in 1981 and the M.A. and Ph.D. degrees in Computer Science from the University of Texas at Austin in 1983 and 1987 respectively. He is currently an Assistant Professor in the Computer Science Department at UCLA. His research interests include parallel languages, distributed algorithms, parallel simulation and software design methodologies. He was selected as a 1991 Presidential Young Investigator by NSF.This research was partially supported by NSF PYI Award number ASC9157610 and by ONR under grant N00014-91-J1605  相似文献   

19.
Information service plays a key role in grid system, handles resource discovery and management process. Employing existing information service architectures suffers from poor scalability, long search response time, and large traffic overhead. In this paper, we propose a service club mechanism, called S-Club, for efficient service discovery. In S-Club, an overlay based on existing Grid Information Service (GIS) mesh network of CROWN is built, so that GISs are organized as service clubs. Each club serves for a certain type of service while each GIS may join one or more clubs. S-Club is adopted in our CROWN Grid and the performance of S-Club is evaluated by comprehensive simulations. The results show that S-Club scheme significantly improves search performance and outperforms existing approaches. Chunming Hu is a research staff in the Institute of Advanced Computing Technology at the School of Computer Science and Engineering, Beihang University, Beijing, China. He received his B.E. and M.E. in Department of Computer Science and Engineering in Beihang University. He received the Ph.D. degree in School of Computer Science and Engineering of Beihang University, Beijing, China, 2005. His research interests include peer-to-peer and grid computing; distributed systems and software architectures. Yanmin Zhu is a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of Computer Science, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology. He received his B.S. degree in computer science from Xi’an Jiaotong University, Xi’an, China, in 2002. His research interests include grid computing, peer-to-peer networking, pervasive computing and sensor networks. He is a member of the IEEE and the IEEE Computer Society. Jinpeng Huai is a Professor and Vice President of Beihang University. He serves on the Steering Committee for Advanced Computing Technology Subject, the National High-Tech Program (863) as Chief Scientist. He is a member of the Consulting Committee of the Central Government’s Information Office, and Chairman of the Expert Committee in both the National e-Government Engineering Taskforce and the National e-Government Standard office. Dr. Huai and his colleagues are leading the key projects in e-Science of the National Science Foundation of China (NSFC) and Sino-UK. He has authored over 100 papers. His research interests include middleware, peer-to-peer (P2P), grid computing, trustworthiness and security. Yunhao Liu received his B.S. degree in Automation Department from Tsinghua University, China, in 1995, and an M.A. degree in Beijing Foreign Studies University, China, in 1997, and an M.S. and a Ph.D. degree in computer science and engineering at Michigan State University in 2003 and 2004, respectively. He is now an assistant professor in the Department of Computer Science and Engineering at Hong Kong University of Science and Technology. His research interests include peer-to-peer computing, pervasive computing, distributed systems, network security, grid computing, and high-speed networking. He is a senior member of the IEEE Computer Society. Lionel M. Ni is chair professor and head of the Computer Science and Engineering Department at Hong Kong University of Science and Technology. Lionel M. Ni received the Ph.D. degree in electrical and computer engineering from Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana, in 1980. He was a professor of computer science and engineering at Michigan State University from 1981 to 2003, where he received the Distinguished Faculty Award in 1994. His research interests include parallel architectures, distributed systems, high-speed networks, and pervasive computing. A fellow of the IEEE and the IEEE Computer Society, he has chaired many professional conferences and has received a number of awards for authoring outstanding papers.  相似文献   

20.
In software testing, developing effective debugging strategies is important to guarantee the reliability of software under testing. A heuristic technique is to cause failure and therefore expose faults. Based on this approach mutation testing has been found very useful technique in detecting faults. However, it suffers from two problems with successfully testing programs: (1) requires extensive computing resources and (2) puts heavy demand on human resources. Later, empirical observations suggest that critical slicing based on Statement Deletion (Sdl) mutation operator has been found the most effective technique in reducing effort and the required computing resources in locating the program faults. The second problem of mutation testing may be solved by automating the program testing with the help of software tools. Our study focuses on determining the effectiveness of the critical slicing technique with the help of the Mothra Mutation Testing System in detecting program faults. This paper presents the results showing the performance of Mothra Mutation Testing System through conducting critical slicing testing on a selected suite of programs. Zuhoor Abdullah Al-Khanjari is an assistant professor in the Computer Science Department at Sultan Qaboos University, Sultanate of Oman. She received her BSc in mathematics and computing from Sultan Qaboos University, MSc and PhD in Computer Science (Software Engineering) from the University of Liverpool, UK. Her research interests include software testing, database management, e-learning, human-computer interaction, programming languages, intelligent search engines, and web data mining and development. ~Currently, she is the coordinator of the software engineering research group in the Department of Computer Science, College of Science, Sultan Qaboos University. She is also coordinating a program to develop e-learning based undergraduate teaching in the Department of Computer Science. Currently she is holding the position of assistant dean for postgraduate studies and research in the College of Science, Sultan Qaboos University, Sultanate of Oman. Martin Woodward is a Senior Fellow in the Computer Science Department at the University of Liverpool in the UK. After obtaining BSc and Ph.D. degrees in mathematics from the University of Nottingham, he was employed by the University of Oxford as a Research Assistant on secondment to the UK Atomic Energy Authority at the Culham Laboratory. He has been at the University of Liverpool for many years and initially worked on the so-called ‘Testbed’ project, helping to develop automated tools for software testing which are now marketed successfully by a commercial organisation. His research interests include software testing techniques, the relationship between formal methods and testing, and software visualisation. He has served as Editor of the journal ‘Software Testing, Verification and Reliability’ for the past thirteen years. Haider Ramadhan is an associate professor in the Computer Science Department at Sultan Qaboos University. He received his BS and MS in Computer Science from University of North Carolina, and the PhD in Computer Science and AI from Sussex University. His research interests include visualization of software, systems, and process, system engineering, human-computer interaction, intelligent search engines, and Web data mining and development. Currently, he is the chairman of the Computer Science Department, College of Science, Sultan Qaboos University, Sultanate of Oman. Swamy Kutti (N. S. Kutti) is an associate professor in the Computer Science Department at Sultan Qaboos University. He received his B.E. in Electronics Engineering from the University of Madras, M.E. in Communication Engineering from Indian Institute of Science (Bangalore), and the MSc in Computer Science from Monash University (Australia) and PhD in Computer Science from Deakin University (Australia). His research interests include Real-Time Programming, Programming Languages, Program Testing and Verification, eLearning, and Distributed Operating Systems.  相似文献   

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