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Showing papers by "Roberto Passerone published in 2002"


Proceedings ArticleDOI
10 Nov 2002
TL;DR: The notion of adaptability is introduced as the property that two interfaces have when they can be made compatible by communicating through a converter that meets specified requirements, and shows that verifying adaptability and synthesizing an appropriate converter are two faces of the same coin.
Abstract: An essential problem in component-based design is how to compose components designed in isolation. Several approaches have been proposed for specifying component interfaces that capture behavioral aspects such as interaction protocols, and for verifying interface compatibility. Likewise, several approaches have been developed for synthesizing converters between incompatible protocols. In this paper, we introduce the notion of adaptability as the property that two interfaces have when they can be made compatible by communicating through a converter that meets specified requirements. We show that verifying adaptability and synthesizing an appropriate converter are two faces of the same coin: adaptability can be formalized and solved using a game-theoretic framework, and then the converter can be synthesized as a strategy that always wins the game. Finally we show that this framework can be related to the rectification problem in trace theory.

112 citations


Proceedings ArticleDOI
10 Nov 2002
TL;DR: The notion of adaptability is introduced as the property that two interfaces have when they can be made compatible by communicating through a converter that meets specified requirements, and shows that verifying adaptability and synthesizing an appropriate converter are two faces of the same coin.
Abstract: An essential problem in component-based design is how to compose components designed in isolation. Several approaches have been proposed for speeding component interfaces that capture behavioral aspects such as interaction protocols, and for verifying interface compatibility. Likewise, several approaches have been developed for synthesizing converters between incompatible protocols. In this paper, we introduce the notion of adaptability as the property that two interfaces have when they can be made compatible by communicating through a converter that meets specified requirements. We show that verifying adaptability and synthesizing an appropriate converter are two faces of the same coin: adaptability can be formalized and solved using a game-theoretic framework and then the converter can be synthesized as a strategy that always wins the game. Finally we show that this framework can be related to the rectification problem in trace theory.

37 citations