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Third European Conference on Software Maintenance and Reengineering
Towards a User-Controlled Software Renovation Factory
Amsterdam, Netherlands
March 03-March 05
ISBN: 0-7695-0090-0
Jacob Brunekreef, University of Amsterdam
Bob Diertens, University of Amsterdam
Part of software maintenance consists of applying program transformations system-wide. In a number of recent papers a factory approach has been advocated in which one program after another is fed to an assembly line that consists of a sequence of transformation tools. The general feeling seems to be that such factories have to be constructed and operated by specialists (the `vendors'). We think this is an undesirable situation. In this paper we present a software renovation factory which is, as much as possible, user-controlled. The factory is controlled by means of a graphical user interface. Two modes of control are distinguished: an architectural mode where an operational renovation factory is constructed out of a set of available tools (parsers, unparsers, transformation modules), and an execution mode where the operational factory is applied for renovation purposes. We report about an experiment with a COBOL transformation factory which has been used for the conversion of a real-world business application system.
Citation:
Jacob Brunekreef, Bob Diertens, "Towards a User-Controlled Software Renovation Factory," csmr, pp.83, Third European Conference on Software Maintenance and Reengineering, 1999
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