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IFIP
2000
Springer
14 years 3 months ago
A New Approach to Software Integration Frameworks for Multi-physics Simulation Codes
Existing software integration frameworks typically require large manual rewrites of existing codes, or specific tailoring of codes written to be used in the framework. The result i...
Eric de Sturler, Jay Hoeflinger, Laxmikant V. Kal&...
IFIP
2000
Springer
14 years 3 months ago
Network-Based Scientific Computing
Elias N. Houstis, Ann Christine Catlin, Ganesh Bal...
IFIP
2000
Springer
14 years 3 months ago
Broadway: A Software Architecture for Scientific Computing
Scientific programs rely heavily on software libraries. This paper describes the limitations of this reliance and shows how it degrades software quality. We offer a solution that u...
Samuel Z. Guyer, Calvin Lin
IFIP
2000
Springer
14 years 3 months ago
Component Technology for High-Performance Scientific Simulation Software
We are developing scientific software component technology to manage the complexity of modern, parallel simulation software and increase the interoperability and re-use of scientif...
Thomas Epperly, Scott R. Kohn, Gary Kumfert
IFIP
2000
Springer
14 years 3 months ago
PETSc and Overture: Lessons Learned Developing an Interface between Components
We consider two software packages that interact with each other as components: Overture and PETSc. An interface between these two packages could be of tremendous value to applicati...
Kristopher R. Buschelman, William Gropp, Lois C. M...
IFIP
2000
Springer
14 years 3 months ago
Test Case Design for the Validation of Component-Based Embedded Systems
The validation of functional and real-time requirements of control software for embedded systems is a difficult task. It usually needs the electronic control unit (ECU) and the co...
W. Fleisch
IFIP
2000
Springer
14 years 3 months ago
A Product Family Approach to Graceful Degradation
Design of gracefully degrading systems, where functionality is gradually reduced in the face of faults, has traditionally been a very difficult and error-prone task. General appro...
William Nace, Phil Koopman