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ICSE
2010
IEEE-ACM

Requirements reflection: requirements as runtime entities

13 years 6 months ago
Requirements reflection: requirements as runtime entities
Computational reflection is a well-established technique that gives a program the ability to dynamically observe and possibly modify its behaviour. To date, however, reflection is mainly applied either to the software architecture or its implementation. We know of no approach that fully supports requirements reflection- that is, making requirements available as runtime objects. Although there is a body of literature on requirements monitoring, such work typically generates runtime artefacts from requirements and so the requirements themselves are not directly accessible at runtime. In this paper, we define requirements reflection and a set of research challenges. Requirements reflection is important because software systems of the future will be self-managing and will need to adapt continuously to changing environmental conditions. We argue requirements reflection can support such self-adaptive systems by making requirements first-class runtime entities, thus endowing software systems...
Nelly Bencomo, Jon Whittle, Peter Sawyer, Anthony
Added 13 Oct 2010
Updated 13 Oct 2010
Type Conference
Year 2010
Where ICSE
Authors Nelly Bencomo, Jon Whittle, Peter Sawyer, Anthony Finkelstein, Emmanuel Letier
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