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Another part of the research
investigates transforming a model representation
based on the specification of its initial and target formalism [22].
This allows one to:
- Generate a functional model from
software or even execution trace (e.g., a solver procedure can be synthesized
from the concepts that are part of the domain specific ontology,
i.e., function calls, and their respective execution ordering);
- Automate generation of different views on a system
(e.g., scenario diagrams from a functional model) or even an
implementation model when translating to a domain specific formalism;
- Automate design by generating specifications from requirements,
ultimately leading to automated code synthesis (or at least stub generation),
which, in turn, can be integrated in an automated optimization
and run-time architecture reconfiguration scheme for hardware and software,
or software only (e.g., for System-on-Chip applications [52]);
- Automatically derive a reconfiguration model for
guiding run-time system changes
from functional and architectural models [3];
- Use best-of-class methods and tools by generating
the required data and model representation format
to prevent inconsistencies at the boundaries between engineering
teams, engineering software, and multiple modeling paradigms, and to
enable the sharing and coordinating
of information flow with minimal overhead [17].
Next: 3. Formalism Modeling
Up: 2. The Proposal
Previous: 1. Model Complexity Transformation
Pieter Mosterman ER
2001-06-19