Record Details

TriSL: A Software Architecture Description Language and Environment

Electronic Theses of Indian Institute of Science

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Field Value
 
Title TriSL: A Software Architecture Description Language and Environment
 
Creator Lakshminarayanan, R
 
Subject Computer and Information Science
Software Architecture
Software Specification
TriSL Abstract Machine (TAM)
System Migration
 
Description As the size and complexity of a software system increases, the design problem goes beyond the algorithms and data structures of the computation. Designing and specifying the overall system structure -- or software architecture --
becomes the central problem. A system's architecture provides a model of the
system that hides implementation detail, allowing the architect to concentrate on the analyses and decisions that are most crucial to structuring
the system to satisfy its requirements.
Unfortunately, with few exceptions, current exploitation of software architecture and architectural style is informal and ad hoc.
The lack of an explicit, independent characterization of architecture and architectural style significantly limits the extent to which software architecture can be exploited using current practices.
Architecture Description Languages(ADL) result from a linguistic approach to the formal description of software architectures. ADLs should facilitate building of architectures, not just specification. Further, they should also address the compositionality, substitutability, and reusability issues, which are the key to
successful large-scale software development.

A software architecture description language with a well defined type system can facilitate compositionality, substitutability, and usability, the three keys to successful large-scale software development.
Our contribution is a new software architecture
description language, TriSL, which supports these features. In this talk we describe the design and implementation of TriSL and its type system. We demonstrate the power of our language and its expressiveness through case studies of real world applications.
 
Publisher Indian Institute of Science
 
Contributor Srikant, Y N
 
Date 2005-03-14T08:50:46Z
2005-03-14T08:50:46Z
2005-03-14T08:50:46Z
1999-07
 
Type Electronic Thesis and Dissertation
 
Format 1502792 bytes
application/pdf
 
Identifier http://hdl.handle.net/2005/87
null
 
Language en
 
Rights I grant Indian Institute of Science the right to archive and to make available my thesis or dissertation in whole or in part in all forms of media, now hereafter known. I retain all proprietary rights, such as patent rights. I also retain the right to use in future works (such as articles or books) all or part of this thesis or dissertation.