Modeling and Reasoning over Distributed Systems using Aspect-Oriented Graph Grammars

Rodrigo Machado
(Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul)
Reiko Heckel
(University of Leicester)
Leila Ribeiro
(Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul)

Aspect-orientation is a relatively new paradigm that introduces abstractions to modularize the implementation of system-wide policies. It is based on a composition operation, called aspect weaving, that implicitly modifies a base system by performing related changes within the system modules. Aspect-oriented graph grammars (AOGG) extend the classic graph grammar formalism by defining aspects as sets of rule-based modifications over a base graph grammar. Despite the advantages of aspect-oriented concepts regarding modularity, the implicit nature of the aspect weaving operation may also introduce issues when reasoning about the system behavior. Since in AOGGs aspect weaving is characterized by means of rule-based rewriting, we can overcome these problems by using known analysis techniques from the graph transformation literature to study aspect composition. In this paper, we present a case study of a distributed client-server system with global policies, modeled as an aspect-oriented graph grammar, and discuss how to use the AGG tool to identify potential conflicts in aspect weaving.

In Ian Mackie and Anamaria Martins Moreira: Proceedings Tenth International Workshop on Rule-Based Programming (RULE 2009), Brasília, Brazil , 28th June 2009, Electronic Proceedings in Theoretical Computer Science 21, pp. 39–50.
Published: 30th March 2010.

ArXived at: https://dx.doi.org/10.4204/EPTCS.21.4 bibtex PDF

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