The fourth workshop on specification and verification of
component-based systems is affiliated with
ESEC/FSE 2005
and was held in room 119 of the Faculty of Economics at
the Campolide campus of the New University of Lisbon, Portugal,
September 5-6, 2005.
The program featured an invited talk by Ranjit Jhala.
Information is available on the following topics.
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2005 Proceedings PDF file (including
all papers and poster abstracts, 115 pages, ISU TR #05-19).
This also appears as ACM Software Engineering Notes, volume 31, number 2, March, 2006. The papers are also available in the ACM Digital Library.
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Program for the workshop,
with separate links to each of the papers and poster abstracts for the
2005 workshop. (Note that this reflects a modified
schedule, and thus
differs slightly from the order in the proceedings.) This is useful
if you cannot print the entire proceedings or if you want to view or
print individual papers.
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Talk slides from the 2005 workshop presentations.
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Schedule for the workshop.
This includes links to the papers and posters presented.
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Old
call for papers
(also in
PDF,
MS Word,
and plain text
formats). (The deadline for papers was June 20.)
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Themes
and Goals
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Sponsors
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Organization
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Web site for the SAVCBS workshop series.
Themes and Goals:
This workshop
is concerned with how formal (i.e., mathematical) techniques
can be or should be used to establish a suitable foundation for the specification
and verification of component-based systems. Component-based systems are
a growing concern for the software engineering community. Specification
and reasoning techniques are urgently needed to permit composition of systems
from components. Component-based specification and verification is also
vital for scaling advanced verification techniques such as extended static
analysis and model checking to the size of real systems. The workshop will
consider formalization of both functional and non-functional behavior,
such as performance or reliability.
We would like to bring together researchers and practitioners in the
areas of component-based software and formal methods to address the open
problems in modular specification and verification of systems composed
from components. We are interested in bridging the gap between principles
and practice. The intent of bringing participants together at the workshop
is to help form a community-oriented understanding of the relevant research
problems and help steer formal methods research in a direction that will
address the problems of component-based systems. For example, researchers
in formal methods have only recently begun to study principles of object-oriented
software specification and verification, but do not yet have a good handle
on how inheritance can be exploited in specification and verification.
Other issues are also important in the practice of component-based systems,
such as concurrency, mechanization and scalability, performance (time and
space), reusability, and understandability. The participants will brainstorm
about these and related topics to understand both the problems involved
and how formal techniques may be useful in solving them.
The goals of the workshop are to produce:
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An outline of collaborative research topics,
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A list of areas for further exploration,
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An initial taxonomy of the different dimensions along which research in
the area can be categorized. For instance, static/dynamic verification,
modular/whole program analysis, partial/complete specification, soundness/completeness
of the analysis, are all continuums along which particular techniques can
be placed,
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A web site that will be maintained after the workshop to act as a central
clearinghouse for research in this area, and
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A special issue of the journal Formal Aspects of Computing (published
by Springer Verlag). The journal issue will invite revised and expanded
versions of selected papers from this and the previous SAVCBS workshop.
The details of the workshop may vary with the background and interest of
the participants.
Organizers:
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Mike Barnett,
Microsoft Research, Redmond, WA, USA.
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Steve Edwards Dept. of
Computer Science, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, VA 24061, USA.
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Dimitra Giannakopoulou,
RIACS/NASA Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, CA 94035-1000, USA.
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Gary T. Leavens, Department
of Computer Science, Iowa State University, Ames, Iowa, 50011-1041, USA.
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Natasha Sharygina, Software Engineering Institute,
Pittsburgh, PA, 15213
Workshop Paper Selection Committee:
The SAVCBS 2005 workshop gratefully acknowledges financial sponsorship
from Microsoft Research
We also thank the ACM for
helping broker the financial support.
Mike Barnett, Steve Edwards, Dimitra Giannakopoulou, Gary T. Leavens,
and Natasha Sharygina
$Date: 2008/06/02 21:21:10 $