Program Understanding: A Reengineering Case for the Transformation Tool Contest

Tassilo Horn
(University Koblenz-Landau)

In Software Reengineering, one of the central artifacts is the source code of the legacy system in question. In fact, in most cases it is the only definitive artifact, because over the time the code has diverged from the original architecture and design documents. The first task of any reengineering project is to gather an understanding of the system's architecture. Therefore, a common approach is to use parsers to translate the source code into a model conforming to the abstract syntax of the programming language the system is implemented in which can then be subject to querying. Despite querying, transformations can be used to generate more abstract views on the system's architecture. This transformation case deals with the creation of a state machine model out of a Java syntax graph. It is derived from a task that originates from a real reengineering project.

In Pieter Van Gorp, Steffen Mazanek and Louis Rose: Proceedings Fifth Transformation Tool Contest (TTC 2011), Zürich, Switzerland, June 29-30 2011, Electronic Proceedings in Theoretical Computer Science 74, pp. 17–21.
Published: 16th November 2011.

ArXived at: https://dx.doi.org/10.4204/EPTCS.74.3 bibtex PDF
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