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Aspect-Oriented Software Development with Use Cases
Aspect-Oriented Software Development with Use Cases
ISBN: 0321268881
EAN: 2147483647
Year: 2003
Pages: 307
Authors:
Ivar Jacobson
,
Pan-Wei Ng
BUY ON AMAZON
Aspect-Oriented Software Development
Table of Contents
Copyright
REPRINTS AND REVISIONS
Reprints
Revisions
Acknowledgments
About the Editors
About the Contributors
Preface
ABOUT THIS BOOK
HOW TO READ THIS BOOK
Chapter1.Introduction
Section 1.1. BOOK ORGANIZATION
Section 1.2. COMMON TERMINOLOGY
Section 1.3. HISTORICAL CONTEXT
Part1.Languages and Foundations
Chapter2.Aspect-Oriented Programming Is Quantification and Obliviousness
Section 2.1. INTRODUCTION
Section 2.2. LOCAL AND UNITARY STATEMENTS
Section 2.3. OBLIVIOUSNESS
Section 2.4. QUANTIFICATION
Section 2.5. IMPLEMENTATION ISSUES
Section 2.6. ASPECT-ORIENTED LANGUAGES
Section 2.7. RELATED WORK
Section 2.8. CLOSING REMARKS
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
REFERENCES
Chapter3.N Degrees of Separation: Multi-Dimensional Separation of Concerns
Section 3.1. INTRODUCTION
Section 3.2. MOTIVATION
Section 3.3. MULTI-DIMENSIONAL SEPARATION OF CONCERNS
Section 3.4. INSTANTIATION
Section 3.5. RELATED WORK
Section 3.6. CONCLUSIONS AND FUTURE WORK
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
REFERENCES
Chapter4.Principles and Design Rationale of Composition Filters
Section 4.1. INTRODUCTION
Section 4.2. EXAMPLE: SOCIAL SECURITY SERVICES
Section 4.3. INTRA-OBJECT CROSSCUTTING WITH COMPOSITION FILTERS
Section 4.4. INTER-OBJECT CROSSCUTTING
Section 4.5. EVALUATION
Section 4.6. CONCLUSION
REFERENCES
Chapter5.AOP: A Historical Perspective (What s in a Name?)
Section 5.1. A MATTER OF STYLE
Section 5.2. RESEARCH TRENDS IN THE EARLY 90S
Section 5.3. THE BIRTH OF AOP AT PARC
Section 5.4. BUILDING COMMUNITIES
Section 5.5. LOOKING BACK
Section 5.6. THE ESSENCE OF AOP
Section 5.7. FUTURE CHALLENGES
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
REFERENCES
Chapter6.AspectJ
Section 6.1. ASPECTJ GOALS
Section 6.2. THE ASPECTJ LANGUAGE
Section 6.3. ASPECTJ TOOLS
Section 6.4. FUTURE DIRECTIONS
Section 6.5. CONCLUDING REMARKS
Acknowledgments
References
Chapter7.Coupling Aspect-Oriented and Adaptive Programming
Section 7.1. INTRODUCTION
Section 7.2. SHYNESS AS A METAPHOR FOR ADAPTIVE BEHAVIOR
Section 7.3. REFLECTIVE ADAPTIVE PROGRAMMING WITH DJ
Section 7.4. ASPECTUAL ADAPTIVE PROGRAMMING WITH DAJ
Section 7.5. RELATED WORK
Section 7.6. CONCLUSION
REFERENCES
Chapter8.Untangling Crosscutting Models with CAESAR
Section 8.1. INTRODUCTION
Section 8.2. JOIN POINT INTERCEPTION
Section 8.3. THE CAESAR MODEL
Section 8.4. EVALUATION
Section 8.5. IMPLEMENTATION
Section 8.6. RELATED WORK
Section 8.7. SUMMARY AND FUTURE WORK
REFERENCES
Chapter9.Trace-Based Aspects
Section 9.1. INTRODUCTION
Section 9.2. CHARACTERISTICS OF TRACE-BASED ASPECTS
Section 9.3. EXPRESSIVE ASPECTS AND EQUATIONAL REASONING
Section 9.4. DETECTION AND RESOLUTION OF ASPECT INTERACTIONS
Section 9.5. STATIC WEAVING OF SAFETY PROPERTIES
Section 9.6. CONCLUSION
REFERENCES
Chapter10.Using Mixin Technology to Improve Modularity
Section 10.1. INTRODUCTION
Section 10.2. MIXIN TECHNOLOGY
Section 10.3. FIDGET DESIGN
Section 10.4. USING FIDGET
Section 10.5. MIXIN PROGRAMMING SUPPORT
Section 10.6. FUTURE WORK
Section 10.7. RELATED WORK
Section 10.8. CONCLUSION
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
REFERENCES
Chapter11.Separating Concerns with First-Class Namespaces
Section 11.1. INTRODUCTION
Section 11.2. PICCOLA
Section 11.3. EXAMPLE: MIXIN LAYER COMPOSITION
Section 11.4. SPECIFYING COMPOSITIONAL STYLES WITH FORMS
Section 11.5. CONCLUSION
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
REFERENCES
Chapter12.Supporting AOP Using Reflection
Section 12.1. WHAT IS REFLECTION?
Section 12.2. AOP USING REFLECTION
Section 12.3. DISCUSSION
Section 12.4. CONCLUSION
REFERENCES
Chapter13.Inserting Ilities by Controlling Communications
Section 13.1. ACHIEVING ILITIES BY CONTROLLING COMMUNICATION
Section 13.2. OBJECT INFRASTRUCTURE FRAMEWORK
Section 13.3. APPLIED ILITIES
Section 13.4. RELATED WORK
Section 13.5. CONCLUSION
REFERENCES
Chapter14.Using Bytecode Transformation to Integrate New Features
Section 14.1. ASPECTS AND TRANSFORMATION
Section 14.2. AN OVERVIEW OF BYTECODE TRANSFORMATION
Section 14.3. PROGRAMMING TRANSFORMATION
Section 14.4. LESSONS LEARNED
Section 14.5. CONCLUSION
REFERENCES
Chapter15.JManglerA Powerful Back-End for Aspect-Oriented Programming
Section 15.1. INTRODUCTION
Section 15.2. GENERIC INTERCEPTION
Section 15.3. OPEN ARCHITECTURE
Section 15.4. SUPPORT FOR NON-LOCAL TRANSFORMATIONS
Section 15.5. THE BCEL WEAVER
Section 15.6. USAGE SCENARIOS
Section 15.7. RELATED WORK
Section 15.8. CONCLUSIONS AND FUTURE WORK
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
APPENDIX 15.A SIMPLE CODE COVERAGE
REFERENCES
Chapter16.Aspect-Oriented Software Development with Java Aspect Components
Section 16.1. JAC FRAMEWORK AND PROGRAMMING MODEL
Section 16.2. DESIGN NOTATION
Section 16.3. JAC ARCHITECTURE FOR DISTRIBUTION
Section 16.4. IMPLEMENTATION AND PERFORMANCE ISSUES FOR JAC
Section 16.5. RELATED TECHNOLOGIES AND TOOLS
Section 16.6. CONCLUSION
REFERENCES
Part2.Software Engineering
Chapter17.Engineering Aspect-Oriented Systems
Section 17.1. REQUIREMENTS ENGINEERING
Section 17.2. SPECIFICATION
Section 17.3. DESIGN
Section 17.4. IMPLEMENTATION
Section 17.5. EVOLUTION
Section 17.6. ASPECT INTERACTION
Section 17.7. CONCLUSION
REFERENCES
Chapter18.Aspect-Orientation in the Software Lifecycle: Fact and Fiction
Section 18.1. INTRODUCTION
Section 18.2. ASPECTS AT IMPLEMENTATION LEVEL
Section 18.3. ASPECTS AT DESIGN LEVEL
Section 18.4. CONCLUSION
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
REFERENCES
Chapter19.Generic Aspect-Oriented Design with ThemeUML
Section 19.1. INTRODUCTION
Section 19.2. MOTIVATION
Section 19.3. CROSSCUTTING THEMES: THE MODEL
Section 19.4. ASPECTS AS THEMES: EXAMPLES
Section 19.5. MAP TO HYPERJ
Section 19.6. MAP TO ASPECTJ
Section 19.7. MAPPING TO PROGRAMMING MODELS
Section 19.8. RELATED WORK
Section 19.9. CONCLUSION
REFERENCES
Chapter20.Expressing Aspects Using UML Behavioral and Structural Diagrams
Section 20.1. INTRODUCTION
Section 20.2. CONCEPTS, NOTATION, AND THE MODELING LANGUAGE
Section 20.3. THE PROCESS PRESCRIBED BY OUR METHODOLOGY
Section 20.4. REALIZING THE BENEFITS OF OUR METHODOLOGY
Section 20.5. CONCLUSION
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
REFERENCES
Chapter21.Concern Modeling for Aspect-Oriented Software Development
Section 21.1. INTRODUCTION
Section 21.2. WHAT IS A CONCERN?
Section 21.3. A VIEW OF CONCERNS
Section 21.4. WHY DO WE NEED CONCERN MODELING?
Section 21.5. CONCERN MODELING AS A FIRST-CLASS UNDERTAKING
Section 21.6. COSMOS: A CONCERN-SPACE MODELING SCHEMA
Section 21.7. A CONCERN-MODEL EXAMPLE
Section 21.8. RELATED WORK
Section 21.9. ADDITIONAL DISCUSSION
Section 21.10. CONCLUSION
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
REFERENCES
Chapter22.Design Recommendations for Concern Elaboration Tools
Section 22.1. THE TOOLS STUDIED
Section 22.2. STUDY FORMAT
Section 22.3. DATA
Section 22.4. RESULTS
Section 22.5. RELATED WORK
Section 22.6. CONCLUSION
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
REFERENCES
Chapter23.An Initial Assessment of Aspect-Oriented Programming
Section 23.1. ASPECTJ
Section 23.2. EXPERIMENTS
Section 23.3. INSIGHTS FROM COMBINED ANALYSIS
Section 23.4. EXPERIMENTAL CRITIQUE
Section 23.5. RELATED WORK
Section 23.6. SUMMARY
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
APPENDIX 23.A
REFERENCES
Chapter24.Aspect-Oriented Dependency Management
Section 24.1. DEPENDENCY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES
Section 24.2. INDIRECTION AS A GENERALIZED PRINCIPLE: FROM POINTERS TO DESIGN PATTERNS AND BEYOND
Section 24.3. ASPECT-ORIENTED ALTERNATIVES TO DESIGN PATTERNS
Section 24.4. GUIDELINES FOR ASPECT-ORIENTED DEPENDENCY MANAGEMENT
Section 24.5. MODELING BENEFITS FROM ASPECT-ORIENTED DEPENDENCY MANAGEMENT
REFERENCES
Chapter25.Developing Software Components with Aspects: Some Issues and Experiences
Section 25.1. INTRODUCTION
Section 25.2. MOTIVATION
Section 25.3. OUR APPROACH
Section 25.4. COMPONENT SPECIFICATION AND DESIGN WITH ASPECTS
Section 25.5. COMPONENT IMPLEMENTATION WITH ASPECTS
Section 25.6. USING ASPECTS AT RUNTIME
Section 25.7. RELATED WORK
Section 25.8. EVALUATION
Section 25.9. FUTURE RESEARCH DIRECTIONS
Section 25.10. CONCLUSION
REFERENCES
Chapter26.Smartweaver: A Knowledge-Driven Approach for Aspect Composition
Section 26.1. KNOWLEDGE-DRIVEN WEAVING
Section 26.2. A WORKFLOW APPLICATION EXAMPLE
Section 26.3. APPLYING SMARTWEAVER: THE DEVELOPER S VIEWPOINT
Section 26.4. DEFINING THE WEAVING KNOWLEDGE: THE DESIGNER S VIEWPOINT
Section 26.5. RELATED WORK
Section 26.6. CONCLUSION
REFERENCES
Part3.Applications
Chapter27.Developing Secure Applications Through Aspect-Oriented Programming
Section 27.1. INTRODUCTION
Section 27.2. THE DOMAIN OF APPLICATION-LEVEL SECURITY
Section 27.3. AN EXPERIENCE REPORT
Section 27.4. DISCUSSION
Section 27.5. RELATED WORK
Section 27.6. CONCLUSION
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
REFERENCES
Chapter28.Structuring Operating System Aspects
Section 28.1. ASPECTC
Section 28.2. CONCLUSION
REFERENCES
Chapter29.Aspect-Oriented Programming for Database Systems
Section 29.1. INTRODUCTION
Section 29.2. CROSSCUTTING CONCERNS IN OBJECT-ORIENTED DATABASE SYSTEMS
Section 29.3. AOP IN OBJECT-ORIENTED DATABASE SYSTEMS
Section 29.4. EVALUATION OF THE ASPECT-ORIENTED APPROACH
Section 29.5. OTHER APPROACHES TO MODULARIZING CROSSCUTTING CONCERNS IN DATABASE SYSTEMS
Section 29.6. CONCLUSION
REFERENCES
Chapter30.Two-Level Aspect Weaving to Support Evolution in Model-Driven Synthesis
Section 30.1. MODEL-INTEGRATED COMPUTING AND AOSD
Section 30.2. EXAMPLE: MODEL WEAVING OF EAGER-LAZY EVALUATION CONSTRAINTS
Section 30.3. GENERATING ASPECT CODE FROM DOMAIN-SPECIFIC MODELS
Section 30.4. CONCLUSION
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
REFERENCES
Chapter31.Dynamic Aspect-Oriented Infrastructure
Section 31.1. INTRODUCTION
Section 31.2. APPLICATION SCENARIO
Section 31.3. APPLICATION AWARENESS USING ASPECT ORIENTATION
Section 31.4. MEETING APPLICATION-AWARENESS REQUIREMENTS WITH PROSE
Section 31.5. WEAVING ASPECTS IN A COMMUNITY OF NODES
Section 31.6. USAGE EXAMPLES OF AOP IN APPLICATION AWARENESS
Section 31.7. CONCLUSION
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
REFERENCES
Index
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
J
K
L
M
N
O
P
Q
R
S
T
U
V
W
X
Aspect-Oriented Software Development with Use Cases
ISBN: 0321268881
EAN: 2147483647
Year: 2003
Pages: 307
Authors:
Ivar Jacobson
,
Pan-Wei Ng
BUY ON AMAZON
A+ Fast Pass
Domain 2 Diagnosing and Troubleshooting
Domain 4 Motherboard/Processors/Memory
Domain 5 Printers
Domain 1 Operating System Fundamentals
Domain 3 Diagnosing and Troubleshooting
Cisco Voice Gateways and Gatekeepers
Deployment Scenarios
Case Study: Configuring SIP Between a Gateway and CallManager 5.x
Connecting to an IP WAN
Gatekeeper Deployment Models
Configuring Directory Gatekeepers
.NET-A Complete Development Cycle
Choosing a Software Development Model
Commonly Used Software Development Models
The Project Vision and Business Case
Implementation of Regions, Pens, and Brushes
References for Further Reading
DNS & BIND Cookbook
Configuring DNS So a Mail Server and the Email It Sends Pass Anti-Spam Tests
Introduction
Transferring a Zone Programmatically
Transferring a Zone Using dig
Configuring rndc to Work Over IPv6
Understanding Digital Signal Processing (2nd Edition)
LOW-PASS FIR FILTER DESIGN
BANDPASS QUADRATURE SIGNALS IN THE FREQUENCY DOMAIN
REFERENCES
INCOHERENT AVERAGING
Appendix E. Decibels (dB and dBm)
Digital Character Animation 3 (No. 3)
Hierarchies and Character Animation
Chapter Four. Basics of Animation
The Mechanics of Walking
Transitions
Conclusion
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