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DSPL 2017 : 10th International Workshop on Dynamic Software Product Lines - Adaptive Systems through Runtime Variability (DSPL '17) | |||||||||||||||
Link: http://sites.lero.ie/dspl2017 | |||||||||||||||
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Call For Papers | |||||||||||||||
10th International Workshop on Dynamic Software Product Lines -
Adaptive Systems through Runtime Variability (DSPL '17) http://sites.lero.ie/dspl2017 co-located with the 21st International Systems and Software Product Line Conference (SPLC '17), Sept 25-29, Sevilla, Spain Important Dates for Paper Submissions Submission Deadline (strict): May 31, 2017 (extended) Notification of Acceptance: June 14, 2017 Camera-Ready Version: June 22, 2017 Workshop Organizers - Jesper Andersson, Linnaeus University, Sweden - Rafael Capilla, Rey Juan Carlos University, Spain - Luciano Baresi, Politecnico di Milano, Italy - Holger Eichelberger, University of Hildesheim, Germany Workshop goals: The concept of adaptation and self-adaptation of systems, in particular at runtime has caught the attention of the research community at large, both inside the domain of Software Product Lines (SPL) as well as outside SPL in areas like models-at-runtime, self-adaptive systems, ubiquitous computing, and specific application domains where runtime adaptation and post-deployment activities are required. Dynamic software product lines (DSPL) were established as a research area under the assumption that product line concepts can be very usefully applied in this context. Since its inception the DSPL-workshop addresses the mission of supporting adaptive and adaptable system development based on product line concepts. The lack of maturity and consolidation of DSPL approaches stills needs significant research effort to advance the state of the art. Also synergies between other fields on adaptive systems and DSPL could be explored and exploited more systematically. Our focus is to extend the community of researchers and to provide a forum for the discussion of current research on related topics. TOPICS: The workshop will solicit papers covering the following areas of DSPL embracing integrations and interactions between various fields of adaptive systems and DSPLs: Organization of DSPLs: - Development approaches and organizational models to set a DSPL - Comparison between conventional SPL, and DSPL and adaptive system models - New activities required by a DSPL - Upfront cost and post-deployment activities Dynamic variability management: - Managing runtime variants and variation points - Runtime managers supporting variability - Optimization of runtime variability solutions - Variability constraints and dependencies managed at runtime - Dynamic and multiple binding times - Rebinding and reconfiguration after deployment - Context variability analysis and design - Integration of pre- and runtime variability DSPL and software engineering: - DSPL runtime requirements and architecture - Dynamic component models and libraries - Models@runtime supporting variability - Trade-off analysis between adaptability and quality properties - Tools supporting any aspect related to DSPL and dynamic variability - DSPL as a dynamic Ecosystem DSPL application domains: - Role of dynamic variability in specific application domains (e.g., Automotive and smart vehicles, Critical systems, Drones, Cloud systems, Robotics) - Self-adaptive systems using dynamic variability techniques (e.g., WSN) - Context variability for IoT software SUBMISSION We solicit short, thought-provoking papers reporting work in progress, industrial experience, and real-world examples. Full papers are also eligible and should report mature research results. Papers should be in formatted according to the standard ACM proceedings style guide, and submitted electronically in PDF format. Papers should not exceed 6 (we recommend 4 pages for short versions). Submissions should be submitted via: https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=dspl17 Accepted papers of the workshop will be published in the SPLC proceedings. Steering Committe: - Mike Hinchey, Lero-the Irish Software Engineering Research Centre, Limerick, Ireland - Sooyong Park, Sogang University, South Korea - Klaus Schmid, University of Hildesheim, Germany Program Committee: - Raian Ali, Bournemouth University, UK - Eduardo Almeida, Universidade Federal de Bahia, Brasil - Jan Bosch, Chalmers University, Sweden - Vijayan Sugumaran, Oakland University, USA & Sogang University, South Korea - In-Young Ko, KAIST, South Korea - Hassan Gomaa, George Mason University, USA - Jaejoon Lee, Lancaster University, UK - Pete Sawyer, Lancaster University, UK - Douglas C. Schmidt, Vanderbilt University, USA - Danny Weyns, KU Leuven, Belgium - Aitor Murguzur, Microsoft, Spain - Jason Mansell, Tecnalia, Spain - Vicente Pelechano, Technical University of Valencia, Spain - Lidia Fuentes, University of Málaga, Spain - Clement Quinton, Politecnico di Milano, Italy - Bashar Nuseibeh, Open University, UK - Shinichi Honiden, National Institute of Informatics, Japan - Andreas Metzger, Uni Essen, Germany - Franco Zambonelli, Uni Modena-Reggio Emilia, Italy - Patrick Heymans, University of Namur, Belgium - Kim Mens, University of Lovaine, Belgium |
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