The Unified Modeling Language user guide
The Unified Modeling Language user guide
The Unified Modeling Language reference manual
The Unified Modeling Language reference manual
Using UML to specify QoS constraints in ODP
Computer Networks: The International Journal of Computer and Telecommunications Networking
An UML-Based Meta-Language for the QOS-Aware Enterprise Specification of Open Distributed Systems
PRO-VE '02 Proceedings of the IFIP TC5/WG5.5 Third Working Conference on Infrastructures for Virtual Enterprises: Collaborative Business Ecosystems and Virtual Enterprises
Addressing Computational Viewpoint Design
EDOC '03 Proceedings of the 7th International Conference on Enterprise Distributed Object Computing
Modeling the ODP Computational Viewpoint with UML 2.0
EDOC '05 Proceedings of the Ninth IEEE International EDOC Enterprise Computing Conference
Interaction signatures and action templates in the ODP computational viewpoint
SEPADS'07 Proceedings of the 6th WSEAS International Conference on Software Engineering, Parallel and Distributed Systems
Core meta-modelling semantics of UML: the pUML approach
UML'99 Proceedings of the 2nd international conference on The unified modeling language: beyond the standard
WSEAS Transactions on Computers
On UML modeling of computational interfaces & interactions in the UML4oDP computational language
ICCOMP'08 Proceedings of the 12th WSEAS international conference on Computers
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Open Distributed Processing systems are constructed in terms of five viewpoints. The computational viewpoint which supports three sorts of interaction models imposes constraints on their corresponding computational interfaces. Computational interfaces are strongly typed so as to sustain meaningful object interaction. We address in this work the need to re-verbalize both interaction signature concepts, and, typing rules for computational interfaces in order to steadily formalise them; while, preserving semantics of their initial definitions. This need comes from the fact that those initial definitions are ambiguous, because, they are described in natural language. Based on their new definitions, we shall present a consistent UML model for interaction signatures, as well as, OCL specification of typing rules concerning computational interfaces supporting those interactions.