• DocumentCode
    3481376
  • Title

    Conformance Checking with Constraint Logic Programming: The Case of Feature Models

  • Author

    Mazo, Raúl ; Lopez-Herrejon, Roberto E. ; Salinesi, Camille ; Diaz, Daniel ; Egyed, Alexander

  • Author_Institution
    CRI, Pantheon Sorbonne Univ., Paris, France
  • fYear
    2011
  • fDate
    18-22 July 2011
  • Firstpage
    456
  • Lastpage
    465
  • Abstract
    Developing high quality systems depends on developing high quality models. An important facet of model quality is their consistency with respect to their meta-model. We call the verification of this quality the conformance checking process. We are interested in the conformance checking of Product Line Models (PLMs). The problem in the context of product lines is that product models are not created by instantiating a meta-model: they are derived from PLMs. Therefore it is usually at the level of PLMs that conformance checking is applied. On the semantic level, a PLM is defined as the collection of all the product models that can be derived from it. Therefore checking the conformance of the PLM is equivalent to checking the conformance of all the product models. However, we would like to avoid this naïve approach because it is not scalable due to the high number of models. In fact, it is even sometimes infeasible to calculate the number of product models of a PLM. Despite the importance of PLM conformance checking, very few research works have been published and tools do not adequately support it. In this paper, we present an approach that employs Constraint Logic Programming as a technology on which to build a PLM conformance checking solution. The paper demonstrates the approach with feature models, the de facto standard for modeling software product lines. Based on an extensive literature review and an empirical study, we identified a set of 9 conformance checking rules and implemented them on the GNU Prolog constraints solver. We evaluated our approach by applying our rules to 50 feature models of sizes up to 10000 features. The evaluation showed that our approach is effective and scalable to industry size models.
  • Keywords
    constraint handling; product life cycle management; software reusability; GNU Prolog constraints solver; PLM; conformance checking; constraint logic programming; model quality; software product lines; Context modeling; Frequency modulation; Sensor phenomena and characterization; Unified modeling language; Vibrations; conformance checking; constraint logic programming; feature models; product line models; verification;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Computer Software and Applications Conference (COMPSAC), 2011 IEEE 35th Annual
  • Conference_Location
    Munich
  • ISSN
    0730-3157
  • Print_ISBN
    978-1-4577-0544-1
  • Electronic_ISBN
    0730-3157
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/COMPSAC.2011.66
  • Filename
    6032382