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Trust-by-contract: Modelling, analysing and predicting behaviour in software architectures

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 04:26 authored by Heinrich SchmidtHeinrich Schmidt, I Poernomo, R Reussner
Architecture description languages (ADLs) are used to specify high-level, compositional views of a software application. ADL research focuses on software composed of prefabricated parts, so-called software components. ADLs usually come equipped with rigorous state-transition style semantics, facilitating verification and analysis of specifications. Consequently, ADLs are well suited to configuring distributed and event-based systems. However, additional expressive power is required for the description of enterprise software architectures --- in particular, those built upon newer middleware, such as implementations of Java's EJB specification, or Microsoft's COM+/.NET. The enterprise requires distributed software solutions that are scalable, business-oriented and mission-critical. We can make progress toward attaining these qualities at various stages of the software development process. In particular, progress at the architectural level can be leveraged through use of an ADL that incorporates trust and dependability analysis. Also, current industry approaches to enterprise development do not address several important architectural design issues. The TrustME ADL is designed to meet these requirements, through combining approaches to software architecture specification with rigorous design-by-contract ideas. In this paper, we focus on several aspects of TrustME that facilitate specification and analysis of middleware-based architectures for trusted enterprise computing systems.

History

Journal

Journal of Systems and Software

Volume

5

Issue

3

Start page

22

End page

51

Total pages

30

Publisher

Elsevier

Place published

United States

Language

English

Copyright

© 2003 Elsevier

Former Identifier

2006004322

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2013-02-11