Overview
- Editors:
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Timo Käköla
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Dept. Computer Science and Information Systems, University of Jyvaskyla, Finland
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Juan Carlos Duenas
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Dept. Telematic Systems Engineering, Technical University of Madrid, Spain
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About this book
Between July 1999 and June 2005 a group of European companies, research institutes, and universities executed the EUREKA-ITEA projects ESAPS, CAFÉ, and FAMILIES on the topic of product line engineering. The projects originated from the need of the industry to improve software engineering performance by organizing product development in product lines. The results obtained within the projects have been implemented in several large industries (e.g., automotive, e-business, medical systems, and mobile phones). They involve a radical shift in software construction and production. The most important research results of the projects are collected in this book. Product line engineering was already applied within industry in the 1980s and presumably earlier. In the 1980s, good architects in many telecommunications c- panies based their architectures on the ideas of David Parnas, who published on the subject of program families . They were facilitated by the CHILL language widely used by the telecommunications companies. This language deploys the same modularity principles as the Modula programming language family. Modularity is a crucial ingredient for implementing systems with a component-based architecture. Being able to compose the products of components is an important mechanism in all product line architectures. In the 1990s, the product line ideas started to gain ground in other industries. Around 1995, the company experiences reached the academia and since then people in companies and academia have collaborated widely on this subject. The ESAPS, CAFÉ, and FAMILIES projects manifest an institutionalized form of this collaboration.
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Table of contents (16 chapters)
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Front Matter
Pages I-XXXIV
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Product Line Management
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- Eelco Rommes, Pierre America
Pages 3-52
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Product Line Requirements Engineering
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Front Matter
Pages 125-126
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- Stan Bühne, Günter Halmans, Kim Lauenroth, Klaus Pohl
Pages 161-194
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- Joachim Bayer, Sebastien Gerard, Øystein Haugen, Jason Mansell, Birger Møller-Pedersen, Jon Oldevik et al.
Pages 195-241
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Product Line Architecture
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Front Matter
Pages 243-244
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- Svein Hallsteinsen, Gerard Schouten, Gert Jan Boot, Tor Erlend Fægri
Pages 245-273
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- Tor Erlend Fægri, Svein Hallsteinsen
Pages 275-326
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- Jose L. Arciniegas, Juan C. Dueñas, Jose L. Ruiz, Rodrigo Cerón, Jesus Bermejo, Miguel A. Oltra
Pages 327-372
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Product Line Testing
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Front Matter
Pages 423-424
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- Antonia Bertolino, Alessandro Fantechi, Stefania Gnesi, Giuseppe Lami
Pages 425-445
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- Clémentine Nebut, Yves Le Traon, Jean-Marc Jezequel
Pages 447-477
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- Andreas Reuys, Sacha Reis, Erik Kamsties, Klaus Pohl
Pages 479-520
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Specific Product Line Engineering Issues
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Front Matter
Pages 521-522
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Reviews
From the reviews:
"This book is a highly valuable resource for educators, researchers, and practitioners; it synthesizes the results of the work done by a group of European companies, research institutes, and universities on EUREKAITEA projects … on the topic of product-line engineering. The book will also help managers and decision makers planning to adopt product-line engineering practices at their companies gain insight into the effort involved." (Raghvinder Sangwan, ACM Computing Reviews, Vol. 49 (4), April, 2008)
Editors and Affiliations
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Dept. Computer Science and Information Systems, University of Jyvaskyla, Finland
Timo Käköla
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Dept. Telematic Systems Engineering, Technical University of Madrid, Spain
Juan Carlos Duenas