Rodin Workshop 2009: Difference between revisions
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* Eduardo Mazza, A tool for specifying and validating software responsibility | * Eduardo Mazza, A tool for specifying and validating software responsibility | ||
* Mar Yah Said, Language and Tool Support for Class and State Machine Refinement in UML-B | * Mar Yah Said, [http://wiki.event-b.org/images/Rodin_Workshop_16_July_2009_2.pdf Language and Tool Support for Class and State Machine Refinement in UML-B] | ||
* Colin Snook, [http://wiki.event-b.org/images/An_EMF_framework_for_EventB.pdf An EMF Framework for Event-B] | * Colin Snook, [http://wiki.event-b.org/images/An_EMF_framework_for_EventB.pdf An EMF Framework for Event-B] | ||
* James Sharp, Using CSP Refusal Specifications to Ensure Event-B Refinement | * James Sharp, Using CSP Refusal Specifications to Ensure Event-B Refinement |
Revision as of 10:08, 24 July 2009
Rodin User and Developer Workshop July 15-17 2009
While much of the continued development and use of Rodin takes place within the DEPLOY Project, there is a growing group of users and plug-in developers outside of DEPLOY. In July 2009, DEPLOY organised a workshop at the University of Southampton to bring together existing and potential users and developers of the Rodin toolset and to foster a broader community of Rodin users and developers. For Rodin users the workshop provided an opportunity to share tool experiences and to gain an understanding of on-going tool developments. For plug-in developers the workshop provided an opportunity to showcase their tools and to achieve better coordination of tool development effort. Moving towards an open source development project will mean that features that cannot be resourced from within the project can be developed outside the project. It will also help to guarantee the longer-term future of the Rodin platform. This report contains the abstracts of the presentations at the workshop on 16 and 17 July 2009. The workshop was preceded by a tutorial for Rodin Plug-in developers on 15 July.
We would like to acknowledge the support of the School of Electronics and Computer Science at the University of Southampton (especially the organisational work of Maggie Bond), the DEPLOY project and additional government funding.
Organisers
Michael Butler, University of Southampton
Stefan Hallerstede, Heinrich-Heine-Universität Düsseldorf
Laurent Voisin, Systerel
Report containing the abstracts is available here
Slides from presentations
Wednesday 15 July
Laurent Voisin and Stefan Hallerstede, Rodin Plug-in Development Tutorial
Thursday 16 July
- Michael Butler, Introduction
- Jean-Raymond Abrial, Doing Mathematics with the Rodin Platform
- Stephen Wright, Experiences with a Quite Big Event-B Model
- John Colley, On Proving with Event-B that a Pipelined Processor Model Implements its ISA Specification
- Kriangsak Damchoom and Michael Butler, An Experiment in Applying Event-B and Rodin to a Flash-Based Filestore
- Philipp Ruemmer, A Theory of Finite Sets, Lists, and Maps for the SMT-Lib Standard
- Matthias Schmalz, Better automated theorem proving in Event-B
- Issam Maamria, Proposal for an extensible rule-based prover for Event-B
- Jens Bendisposto, Using and Extending ProB
- Ilya Lopatkin, Towards the SAL plugin for the Rodin platform
- Kenneth Lausdahl and Miguel Ferreira, An Overview of Overture
- Michael Butler, Roadmap for the Rodin Tool
Friday 17 July
- Aryldo G Russo, Formal Methods Outside the Mother Land
- Maria Teresa Llano, Systems Evolution via Animation and Reasoning
- Atif Mashkoor, BRANIMATION
- Fredrik Degerlund and Richard Grönblom, A Framework for Code Generation and Scheduling of Event-B Models
- Alexei Iliasov, On Event-B and Control Flow
- Michael Jastram, Requirements Traceability
- Joris Rehm, LORIA, A Rodin plugin for quantitative timed models
- Abderrahman Matoussi, Expressing KAOS Goal Refinement Patterns with Event-B
- Eduardo Mazza, A tool for specifying and validating software responsibility
- Colin Snook, An EMF Framework for Event-B
- James Sharp, Using CSP Refusal Specifications to Ensure Event-B Refinement