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  1. International Workshop on Software Engineering for Pervasive Computing Applications, Systems, and Environments (SEPCASE).
  2. First International Workshop on Software Engineering for Pervasive Computing Applications, Systems, and Environments (SEPCASE '07)
  3. Do No Harm: Model Checking eHome Applications
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First International Workshop on Software Engineering for Pervasive Computing Applications, Systems, and Environments (SEPCASE '07)
The Service Ecosystem: Dynamic Self-Aggregation of Pervasive Communication Services
Addressing Dynamic Contextual Adaptation with a Domain-Specific Language
Generative Programming Approach for Building Pervasive Computing Applications
Towards Aspect-Oriented Programming for Context-Aware Systems: A Comparative Study
Aspect-Oriented Model-Driven Development for Mobile Context-Aware Computing
Evaluating User-centric Adaptation with Goal Models
Applying Model-Driven Development to Pervasive System Engineering
Do No Harm: Model Checking eHome Applications
Exploring the Role of Software Architecture in Dynamic and Fault Tolerant Pervasive Systems
Precision: Privacy Enhanced Context-Aware Information Fusion in Ubiquitous Healthcare
Pedestrian Navigation Systems: a Case Study of Deep Personalization

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Do No Harm: Model Checking eHome Applications

Content Provider IEEE Xplore Digital Library
Author Zebin Chen Fickas, S.
Copyright Year 2007
Description Author affiliation: Univ. of Oregon, Eugene (Zebin Chen; Fickas, S.)
Abstract Our group is building eHome applications for the cognitively impaired population. We have chosen to work with an existing framework, OSGi, that allows us to more quickly develop specific applications. We use a combination of traditional testing and formal verification to insure that the OSGi-based applications we build will cause no harm to the cognitively impaired users of our systems. This paper will focus on our results to date of using model checking to verify OSGi applications. In this paper, we describe the construction of a formal model parallel to the OSGi framework, which can be reused for rapid development of formal models for OSGi applications. With this approach, we have found the existence of stale references in several real examples. Stale references are a known concurrency problem in OSGi applications but difficult to get rid of. We argue that domain-specific reuse at the model level is an effective way to bring model checking closer to typical developers and tackle the concurrency errors. We also proposed and verified potential solutions, which can be used as generic paradigms to tackle the stale references problem in OSGi applications.
Starting Page 8
Ending Page 8
File Size 265157
Page Count 1
File Format PDF
ISBN 0769529704
DOI 10.1109/SEPCASE.2007.4
Language English
Publisher Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc. (IEEE)
Publisher Date 2007-05-20
Publisher Place USA
Access Restriction Subscribed
Rights Holder Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc. (IEEE)
Subject Keyword Concurrent computing System testing Computer bugs Software standards Application software Standards development Programming profession Context modeling Formal verification Software development management
Content Type Text
Resource Type Article
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