=Paper= {{Paper |id=None |storemode=property |title=None |pdfUrl=https://ceur-ws.org/Vol-564/preface.pdf |volume=Vol-564 }} ==None== https://ceur-ws.org/Vol-564/preface.pdf
                                                 LABORATOIRE



                                    INFORMATIQUE, SIGNAUX ET SYSTÈMES
                                           DE SOPHIA ANTIPOLIS
                                                UMR6070




                                   First International Workshop on

     Composition: Objects, Aspects, Components, Services and
                          Product Lines

                                                 15 March 2010

                           To be held in conjunction with
    The 9th International Conference on Aspect-Oriented Software Development
                                    (AOSD.10)

                                        Rennes & Saint Malo, France




Editors: Philippe Lahire, Geri Georg, Mourad Oussalah, Jon Whittle, Naouel Moha, Stefan Van Baelen




                   Laboratoire d'Informatique, Signaux et Systèmes de Sophia-Antipolis - UNSA CNRS
       2000, route des Lucioles - Les Algorithmes - bât. Euclide B - BP 121 - 06903 Sophia Antipolis Cedex - France
                           Tél. +33 4 92 94 27 01 - Fax : +33 4 92 94 28 98 - www.i3s.unice.fr
                                                         UMR6070
                                                   Preface

Separation of concerns is an interesting design concept which is more or less addressed in
various paradigms objects, aspects, components and, services in order to achieve software
reusability and adaptability. Composition of these concerns is a key issue in software
development.

The goal of the workshop is to bring the researchers to discuss on software composition
according the paradigm which is used, the degree of dynamicity, the stage in the software life
cycle, the application domain and the software variability. More generally, the unique
contribution of this workshop is to view composition as it is impacted by several points of
variation associated for example to the context of reuse, the time of composition or the
business domain.

Composition can be applied in particular on Objects, Aspects, SOA, Component-Based
architectures and may address various phases of the development process such as: GUI,
design, programming, deployment, and maintenance. We have been particularly interested in
having contributions dealing with any combination of a topic taken in “Composition and
paradig ” and “Composition and product line” in order to get a view of the composition
process colored with variability issues.

We had eleven submissions and the program committee selected only seven of them on the
basis of novelty, relevance to the AOSD community, and adequacy to workshop objective.
According to the papers which had been selected the workshop will address in particular the
following topics:

        Dynamic (re) configuration, adaptation and composition,
        Language features for composition and Software Product Lines.

The proceedings are printed as an internal report of the I3S Laboratory1 and will be included
as the Vol-564 on CEUR-WS.org. They may be reached at http://CEUR-WS.org/Vol-564/.




On behalf of the organizing committee




1
    Internal reports may be reached at the URL : http://www.i3s.unice.fr/I3S/
                           Organisation Committee
                                    (alphabetical order)



   Geri Georg, Colorado State University, U.S.A.,
    (georg@CS.ColoState.EDU)

   Philippe Lahire, I3S laboratory CNRS/University of Nice Sophia Antipolis, France,
    (Philippe.Lahire@unice.fr)

   Naouel Moha, IRISA laboratory CNRS/University of Rennes, France,
    (moha@irisa.fr )

   Mourad Oussalah, LINA laboratory CNRS/University of Nantes, France,
    (mourad.oussalah@univ-nantes.fr)

   Stefan Van Baelen, Department of Computer Science of the K.U. Leuven, Belgium,
    (Stefan.VanBaelen@cs.kuleuven.be)

   Jon Whittle, Department of Computing, Lancaster University, united Kingdom,
    (whittle@comp.lancs.ac.uk)
                           Program Committee
                                 (alphabetical order)




   Olivier Barais (IRISA - Univ. of Rennes, France)
   Djamel Benslimane (LIRIS - Univ. of Lyon, France)
   Christophe Dony (LIRMM – Univ. of Montpellier, France )
   Betty Cheng (Michigan State University , USA)
   Geri Georg (Colorado State University, USA)
   Jeff Gray (Univ. of Alabama at Birmingham , USA)
   Oystein Haugen (SINTEF, Norway)
   Patrick Heymans (FUNDP Namur, Belgium)
   Joerg Kienzle ( McGill University, Canada)
   Gunter Kniesel (Univ. of Bonn, Germany)
   Philippe Lahire (I3S – Univ. of Nice Sophia Antipolis, France)
   Naouel Moha (IRISA - Univ. of Rennes, France)
   Manuel Oriol (Univ. of York, United Kingdom)
   Markku Sakkinen (Univ of Jyväskylä, Finland)
   Lionel Seinturier (LIFL – Univ. of Lille, France)
   Stefan Van Baelen (K.U Leuven, Belgium)
   Gilles Vanwormhoudt (LIFL – Univ. of Lille, France)
   Jon Whittle (Lancaster University, united Kingdom)
                       List of accepted papers


 Tom Dinkelaker, Ralf Mitschke, Karin Fetzer and Mira Mezini. A Dynamic Software
  Product-Line Approach using Aspect Models at Runtime.

 Fredrik Sørensen, Eyvind W. Axelsen and Stein Krogdahl. Dynamic composition with
  package templates.

 Bholanathsingh Surajbali, Paul Grace and Geoff Coulson. ReCycle: Resolving Cyclic
  Dependencies in Dynamically Reconfigurable Aspect Oriented Middleware.

 Tom Dinkelaker, Martin Monperrus and Mira Mezini. Supporting Variability with
  Late Semantic Adaptations of Domain-Specific Modeling Languages.

 Wilke Havinga, Christoph Bockisch and Lodewijk Bergmans. A Case for Custom,
  Composable Composition Operators.

 Christoph Bockisch and Andreas Sewe. Generic IDE Support for Dispatch-Based
  Composition.

 Stefan Walraven, Bert Lagaisse, Eddy Truyen and Wouter Joosen. Aspect-Based
  Variability Model for Cross-Organizational Features in Service Networks.