12th International Symposium on Component Based Software Engineering CBSE 2009 June 22-25, 2009, East Stroudsburg University, Pennsylvania, USA
CALL FOR PAPERS WEBSITE: http://www.sei.cmu.edu/isis/conferences/cbse2009/ GOALS Component Based Software Engineering (CBSE) has emerged as a technology for the rapid assembly of flexible software systems. CBSE combines elements of software architecture, modular software design, software verification, configuration and deployment. The International Symposium on Component Based Software Engineering is the premier forum for innovation in CBSE. The symposium invites researchers and practitioners from any relevant area to share their understanding of CBSE and to engage in active discussion and debate. The symposium addresses participants from both universities and industry. SCOPE If your work involves innovative ways of building computational things from smaller things, then CBSE is the right forum for you. Topics of interest include, but are not limited to, the following: * Models of components and composition * Components, SOAs and workflows * Run-time adaptation * Relations between component models, software architectures and product lines * Declarative, rule-based management of component-based systems * Software quality and extra-functional properties for components and component-based systems * Components and generative or model-driven engineering * Formal specification, reasoning about and testing of component-based systems * Measurement and monitoring * Patterns and frameworks for component-based systems and services * Tools and case studies * Components for real-time systems and sensor networks * Teaching CBSE * Industrial experience reports SPECIAL THEME "Components for Large-Scale Systems of Systems and Ultra-Large Systems" CBSE 2009 is encouraging papers that address the theme of components for large-scale systems of systems and ultra-large systems. Such systems involve the coordination of a vast array of decentralized, heterogeneous and continually evolving subsystems, consequently meeting diverse and often conflicting requirements. The way that component technologies can move from assisting standard system architecture development to large-scale and ultra-large system development is an important open question. Each of the topics listed above apply equally to large-scale and ultra-large case as to traditional development, but the context may demand radically novel solutions to deal with autonomous system components. SUBMISSION Please visit the conference website for details on submission: http://www.sei.cmu.edu/isis/conferences/cbse2009/ Accepted papers will be included in the conference proceedings, published as a volume in Springer¹s Lecture Notes in Computer Science series. LOCATION To foster exchange and collaboration with the software architecture community, CBSE is colocated with the Quality of Software Architectures Conference (QoSA) as part of the federated CompArch event. See the CompArch site for details on QoSA and associated workshops: http://www.comparch-events.org/index/ IMPORTANT DATES Submission February 1, 2009 Notification March 7, 2009 Camera Ready April 4, 2009 ORGANIZATION Program Co-Chairs Grace A. Lewis, Software Engineering Institute (Email: glewis 'at symbol' sei.cmu.edu) Iman Poernomo, King¹s College London (Email: iman.poernomo 'at symbol' kcl.ac.uk) CompArch Organization Chair Christine Hofmeister, East Stroudsburg University, USA Steering Committee Ivica Crnkovic, Malardalen University, Sweden Ian Gorton, Pacific North West National Laboratory, USA George Heineman, Worcester Polytechnic Institute, USA Heinz Schmidt, RMIT University, Australia Judith Stafford, Tufts University, USA Clemens Szyperski, Microsoft, USA Program Committee David Bentley, South Carolina Research Authority, USA Judith Bishop, University of Pretoria, South Africa Behzad Bordbar, University of Birmingham, UK Michel Chaudron, Leiden University, Netherlands Kendra Cooper, University of Texas at Dallas, USA Ivica Crnkovic, Mälardalen University, Sweden Guglielmo De Angelis, National Research Council (CNR), Italy Anthony Earl, Sun Microsystems Incorporated, USA Xavier Franch, Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya, Spain Rose Gamble, University of Tulsa, USA Morven Gentleman, Dalhousie University, Canada Sudipto Ghosh, Colorado State University, USA Ian Gorton, Pacific Northwest National Lab, USA Lars Grunske, Swinburne University of Technology, Australia Richard Hall, Sun Microsystems, USA George Heineman, Worcester Polytechnic Institute, USA Dean Jin, University of Manitoba, Canada Bengt Jonsson, Uppsala University, Sweden Joe Kiniry, University College Dublin, Ireland Gerald Kotonya, Lancaster University, UK Magnus Larsson, ABB AB, Sweden Kung-Kiu Lau, University of Manchester, UK Greg Lettow, ComponentWave, USA Jenny Liu, National ICT Australia, Australia Raphael Marvie, University of Lille, France Henry Muccini, University of L'Aquila, Italy Hausi Müller, University of Victoria, Canada Noel Plouzeau, IRISA - University of Rennes, France Ralf Reussner, University of Karlsruhe, Germany Alessandra Russo, Imperial College London, UK Salah Sadou, Universite de Bretagne Sud, France Christian Salzmann, BMW Group, Germany Douglas Schmidt, Vanderbilt University, USA Jean-Guy Schneider, Swinburne University of Technology, Australia Eleni Stroulia, University of Alberta, Canada Asuman Sünbül, University of Potsdam, Germany Massimo Tivoli, University of L'Aquila, Italy Marco Torchiano, Politecnico di Torino, Italy Mark Vigder, National Research Council, Canada Kurt Wallnau, Software Engineering Institute, USA Dave Wile, Teknowledge Corporation, USA ---- [[ Petri Nets World: ]] [[ http://www.informatik.uni-hamburg.de/TGI/PetriNets/ ]] [[ Mailing list FAQ: ]] [[ http://www.informatik.uni-hamburg.de/TGI/PetriNets/pnml/faq.html ]] [[ Post messages/summary of replies: ]] [[ [email protected] ]]
