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Model-Based Engineering with AADL: An Introduction to the SAE Architecture Analysis & Design Language

Autor Peter Feiler, Peter H. Feiler, David P. Gluch
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 10 oct 2024
Conventional build-then-test practices are making today s embedded, software-reliant systems unaffordable to build. In response, more than thirty leading industrial organizations have joined SAE (formerly, the Society of Automotive Engineers) to define the SAE Architecture Analysis & Design Language (AADL) AS-5506 Standard, a rigorous and extensible foundation for model-based engineering analysis practices that encompass software system design, integration, and assurance. Using AADL, you can conduct lightweight and rigorous analyses of critical real-time factors such as performance, dependability, security, and data integrity. You can integrate additional established and custom analysis/specification techniques into your engineering environment, developing a fully unified architecture model that makes it easier to build reliable systems that meet customer expectations. "Model-Based Engineering with AADL " is the first guide to using this new international standard to optimize your development processes. Coauthored by Peter H. Feiler, the standard s author and technical lead, this introductory reference and tutorial is ideal for self-directed learning or classroom instruction, and is an excellent reference for practitioners, including architects, developers, integrators, validators, certifiers, first-level technical leaders, and project managers. Packed with real-world examples, it introduces all aspects of the AADL notation as part of an architecture-centric, model-based engineering approach to discovering embedded software systems problems earlier, when they cost less to solve. Throughout, the authors compare AADL to other modeling notations and approaches, while presenting the language via a complete case study: the development and analysis of a realistic example system through repeated refinement and analysis. Part One introduces both the AADL language and core Model-Based Engineering (MBE) practices, explaining basic software systems modeling and analysis in the context of an example system, and offering practical guidelines for effectively applying AADL. Part Two describes the characteristics of each AADL element, including their representations, applicability, and constraints. The Appendix includes comprehensive listings of AADL language elements, properties incorporated in the AADL standard, and a description of the book s example system. "
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780134208893
ISBN-10: 0134208897
Pagini: 492
Dimensiuni: 178 x 232 x 27 mm
Greutate: 0.84 kg
Ediția:1. Auflage
Editura: Pearson International

Notă biografică

Peter H. Feiler, senior member of technical staff at the Software Engineering Institute (SEI), is technical lead and author of the SAE AADL standard. In his 27 years at the SEI he has worked on software development environments, configuration management, and real-time embedded systems. He has collaborated with the research community and has applied resulting technologies such as AADL with customers in avionics, space, and automotive industries, as well as government programs.
David P. Gluch, formerly senior member of the technical staff at SEI and now a visiting scientist there, is a professor of software engineering at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University. He has held key engineering and technical management positions with high-tech firms where he developed real-time software-intensive systems for commercial fly-by-wire aircraft control, automated process control, and the Space Shuttle.

Cuprins

Preface         xv  
Introduction         1
 
PART I: Model-Based Engineering and the AADL         3
Chapter 1: Model-Based Software Systems Engineering         5
1.1 MBE and Software System Engineering   6
1.2 AADL and Other Modeling Languages   12
 
Chapter 2: Working with the SAE AADL         17
2.1 AADL Models   19
2.2 System Specification and System Instances   26
 
Chapter 3: Modeling and Analysis with the AADL: The Basics         31
3.1 Developing a Simple Model   31
3.2 Representing Code Artifacts   47
3.3 Modeling Dynamic Reconfigurations   51
3.4 Modeling and Analyzing Abstract Flows   55
3.5 Developing a Conceptual Model   58
3.6 Working with Component Patterns   69
 
Chapter 4: Applying AADL Capabilities         77
4.1 Specifying System Composition   77
4.2 Component Interactions   84
4.3 Modeling Data and Its Use   97
4.4 Organizing a Design   101
 
PART II: Elements of the AADL         109
Chapter 5: Defining AADL Components         113
5.1 Component Names   113
5.2 Component Categories   114
5.3 Declaring Component Types   114
5.4 Declaring a Component’s External Interfaces   118
5.5 Declaring Component Implementations   121
5.6 Summary   125
 
Chapter 6: Software Components         127
6.1 Thread   128
6.2 Thread Group   133
6.3 Process   135
6.4 Data   138
6.5 Subprogram   141
6.6 Subprogram Group   144
 
Chapter 7: Execution Platform Components         147
7.1 Processor   148
7.2 Virtual Processor   151
7.3 Memory   153
7.4 Bus   156
7.5 Virtual Bus   158
7.6 Device   160
 
Chapter 8: Composite and Generic Components         163
8.1 System   163
8.2 Abstract   165
 
Chapter 9: Static and Dynamic Architecture         169
9.1 Subcomponents   169
9.2 Modes   173
 
Chapter 10: Component Interactions          185
10.1 Ports and Connections   186
10.2 Data Access and Connections   210
10.3 Bus Access and Connections   213
10.4 Feature Groups and Connections   217
10.5 Abstract Features and Connections   225
10.6 Arrays and Connections   227
10.7 Subprogram Calls, Access, and Instances   232
10.8 Parameter Connections   240
 
Chapter 11: System Flows and Software Deployment          245
11.1 Flows   245
11.2 Binding Software to Hardware   256
 
Chapter 12: Organizing Models         263
12.1 Naming and Referencing Model Elements   263
12.2 Organizing Models with Packages   266
12.3 Evolving Models by Classifier Refinement   273
12.4 Prototypes as Classifier Parameters   281
 
Chapter 13: Annotating Models         289
13.1 Documenting Model Elements   289
13.2 Using Properties   291
 
Chapter 14: Extending the Language         303
14.1 Property Sets   303
14.2 Annex Sublanguages   312
 
Chapter 15: Creating and Validating Models         317
15.1 Model Creation   317
15.2 Model Creation Tools   319
15.3 System Validation and Generation   321
15.4 System Validation and Generation Tools   322
 
Appendixes         325
Appendix A: Syntax and Property Summary         327
A.1 AADL Syntax   327
A.2 Component Type and Implementation Elements   342
A.3 Basic Property Types and Type Constructors   347
A.4 AADL Reserved Words   348
A.5 AADL Properties   349
A.6 Runtime Services   418
A.7 Powerboat Autopilot System   425
 
Appendix B: Additional Resources         429
B.1 Modeling System Architectures   429
B.2 Cases Studies   431
 
Appendix C: References         435
 
Index         441