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A Case Study: Demands on Component-based Development
Publication Type:
Conference/Workshop Paper
Venue:
Proceedings, 22th International Conference of Software Engineering
Abstract
Building software systems with reusable components
brings many advantages. The development becomes more
efficient, the reliability of the products is enhanced, and the
maintenance requirement is significantly reduced.
Designing, developing and maintaining components for
reuse is, however, a very complex process which places
high requirements not only for the component functionality
and flexibility, but also for the development organization.
In this paper we discuss the different levels of component
reuse, and certain aspects of component development, such
as component generality and efficiency, compatibility
problems, the demands on development environment,
maintenance, etc. The evolution of requirements for
products generates new requirements for components, if
components are not enough general and mature. This
dynamism determines the component life cycle where the
component first reaches its stability and later degenerates in
an asset that is difficult to use, difficult to adapt and
maintain. When reaching this stage, the component
becomes an obstacle for efficient reuse and should be
replaced. Questions related to use of standard and de-facto
standard components are addressed specifically. As an
illustration of reuse issues, we present a successful
implementation of a component-based system which is
widely used for industrial process control.
Bibtex
@inproceedings{Crnkovic173,
author = {Ivica Crnkovic and Magnus Larsson},
title = {A Case Study: Demands on Component-based Development},
month = {May},
year = {2000},
booktitle = {Proceedings, 22th International Conference of Software Engineering},
publisher = {ACM, IEEE},
url = {http://www.es.mdu.se/publications/173-}
}