D32 General Platform Maintenance: Difference between revisions

From Event-B
Jump to navigationJump to search
imported>Tommy
mNo edit summary
imported>Renato
Line 7: Line 7:
* Rule Details View (releases 2.0 and upper)
* Rule Details View (releases 2.0 and upper)
: When doing an interactive proof, one is guided by the proof tree appearing on the proof tree view. However, it is sometimes needed to get more informations about the rules being involved in a proof, such as instantiation details, used hypotheses, etc. The [http://wiki.event-b.org/index.php/Rodin_Proving_Perspective#Rule_Details_View Rule Details View] displaying such details has been added.
: When doing an interactive proof, one is guided by the proof tree appearing on the proof tree view. However, it is sometimes needed to get more informations about the rules being involved in a proof, such as instantiation details, used hypotheses, etc. The [http://wiki.event-b.org/index.php/Rodin_Proving_Perspective#Rule_Details_View Rule Details View] displaying such details has been added.
* Refactoring plug-in (releases 1.2 and upper)
* Refactory plug-in (releases 1.2 and upper)
: ---
: The [http://wiki.event-b.org/index.php/Refactoring_Framework Refactory] plug-in allows the users of the Rodin platform to rename modelling elements. With an unique operation, both declaration and occurrences of an element are renamed. Moreover, renaming an element does not modify their existing proof state (no loss of proof).
* Mathematical extensions (releases 2.0 and upper)
* Mathematical extensions (releases 2.0 and upper)
: The mathematical extension integration required important modifications to the core platform. See [http://wiki.event-b.org/index.php/D32_Mathematical_Extensions].
: The mathematical extension integration required important modifications to the core platform. See [http://wiki.event-b.org/index.php/D32_Mathematical_Extensions].

Revision as of 12:36, 9 November 2010

Overview

The main goal of the platform corrective and evolutive maintenance is to fix the listed known bugs, and implement some new requested features. As in the previous years of DEPLOY, these bugs and features are reported either by mail or through dedicated SourceForge trackers.

The terse list below gives an overwiew of the noteworthy features added in the main platform during the past year:

  • Proof replay on undischarged POs (releases 1.3 and upper)
It often happens, while modifying a model, that a set of previously manually discharged POs are slightly changed and need to be discharged again. However, replaying the proof for those POs could most of the time be enough to discharge it. Hence, a command was added to manually try replaying the proofs for a set of undischarged POs. This request was expressed by end users. See [1].
  • Rule Details View (releases 2.0 and upper)
When doing an interactive proof, one is guided by the proof tree appearing on the proof tree view. However, it is sometimes needed to get more informations about the rules being involved in a proof, such as instantiation details, used hypotheses, etc. The Rule Details View displaying such details has been added.
  • Refactory plug-in (releases 1.2 and upper)
The Refactory plug-in allows the users of the Rodin platform to rename modelling elements. With an unique operation, both declaration and occurrences of an element are renamed. Moreover, renaming an element does not modify their existing proof state (no loss of proof).
  • Mathematical extensions (releases 2.0 and upper)
The mathematical extension integration required important modifications to the core platform. See [2].
  • Documentation
Plug-in developers expressed their need to get a detailed documentation about Rodin extension ability. A dedicated tutorial[3] has been written accordingly, and was the support of a training session given at the Rodin User and Developer Workshop in Düsseldorf this year.
The user manual, user tutorial and other developer documentation on the wiki are continuously, and collaboratively updated and enhanced. Moreover, as soon as a new feature is added to the platform, the corresponding user documentation is created on the Wiki.

See the Release Notes and the SourceForge databases (bugs and feature requests) for details about the previous and upcoming releases of the Rodin platform.

Motivations

The evolutive maintenance (resp. corrective maintenance) has its origin in the DEPLOY project's description of work, and the various requests (resp. bug reports) listed by WP1-4 partners, developers and users. Since the DEPLOY project's birth, various streams can be used to express feature requests or track an encountered bug :

- dedicated trackers,
- DEPLOY mailing lists.

Maintenance tasks to perform are collected from the aforementioned streams and scheduled during WP9 meetings. These tasks are processed in the same way as the task planned in the description of work.

The following table describes the main tasks performed or scheduled tasks motivating the evolutive maintenance:

Origin Maintenance Task Done in 2010 Scheduled in 2011
DoW / WP1-4 partners Prover efficiency and integrity x x
Qualoss assessment Test reports and test coverage [4] x
WP1-4 partners Updating fields of records x
WP1-4 partners Team work x
WP1-4 partners Edition x
WP1-4 partners Increase platform stability x
WP1-4 partners Comments everywhere [5] x
WP1-4 partners Plug-in incompatibilities x
WP1-4 partners Search in goal window [6] x
WP1-4 partners Preferences for the automatic tactics [7] x
WP1-4 partners Hierarchy / refinement view x
Plug-in developers API to extend the Pretty Printer view [8] x
Plug-in developers View the error log [9] x
Plug-in developers Prover API x
Plug-in developers A different update site for unstable plug-ins x
End Users 64-bit Rodin for Mac x
End Users Adding a replay proof command in the Event-B explorer [10] x
End Users Having auto-completion in proof control [11] x
End Users Displaying instantiated hypotheses [12] x
End Users Displaying the inherited elements x

Choices / Decisions

  • Task priority
Listed tasks are being given a priority during WP9 bi-weekly meetings, and then assigned to partners in charge of their processing. It has been decided to give a higher priority to WP1-4 partner's requests.
  • 64-bit release of Rodin for Mac platforms
A major UI bug, due to some incompatibilities between Eclipse 3.5 and Java 1.6 on Mac platforms motivated the migration to the Eclipse 3.6 as basis for the Rodin 2.0 platform. In the meantime, as the 32-bit Java Virtual Machine is no longer supported on Mac platforms, Rodin migrated to Java 1.6, so that the release 2.0 of Rodin became a 64-bit Mac platform only.
The Rodin platforms family is then composed of three executables : 32-bit platforms for Linux and Windows environments and a 64-bit platform for Mac computers.
  • Rodin sources
The sources of Rodin releases are now packed with the platform. It has been decided to ship the sources in every platform release. It is, for developers, a convenient alternative to the available sources on SourceForge (See [13]).
  • Release notes
The release notes contain information about the released plug-ins and centralise the requirements or existing issues which could not be stated at the main platform release date. Thus, since Rodin 2.0 release, it has been chosen to link the contents of the release notes text file included in Rodin releases, with the contents of the dedicated Wiki page.

Available Documentation

The following pages give useful information about the Rodin platform releases:

  • Release notes.
See Rodin Platform Releases.
  • Bugs.
See [14].
  • Feature requests.
See [15].

Planning

During the coming year, special efforts will be made on the following topics, which where pointed out at the last plenary meeting by the WP1-WP4 and encompass end-user requests (see scheduled tasks in [16]):

  • Platform stability and performances
Currently, users struggle through performance flows in the Rodin platform while editing or proving a model. Solving these issues represents a real challenge for the coming year and will be mandatory for the industrial adoption of Rodin and the Event-B methodology.
  • Prover efficiency and integrity
Reaching a state where POs are hundred percent automatically proved is the wager that Rodin developers aim. Getting close to this ideal will increase the satisfaction of industrial users and decrease costs. Enhancing prover facilities are as well, one significant help given to the person in charge of the proving. Enhancing prover is then a continuous task that will be performed until the DEPLOY project's end. However, such automatic or manual pieces of program are main points of integrity concerns. Ensuring their correctness and getting more confidence into them, will thus be a task conducted during this coming year.
  • Plug-in incompatibilities
The problem occurs when several plug-ins are installed and conflicts exist between them. The cumbersome behaviour often spawned by such incompatibilities leads to user's disappointment, or even to the impossility to use the platform. Particular efforts will be given to identify the sources of incompatibilities among plug-ins and coordinate the assignment and processing of the necessary corrective maintenance tasks.