A Validation of Object-Oriented Design Metrics as Quality Indicators
IEEE Transactions on Software Engineering
Condor: a distributed job scheduler
Beowulf cluster computing with Linux
Version Control With Subversion
Version Control With Subversion
Reusability and maintainability metrics for object-oriented software
ACM-SE 38 Proceedings of the 38th annual on Southeast regional conference
Open Source Development with CVS
Open Source Development with CVS
The NMI build & test laboratory: continuous integration framework for distributed computing software
LISA '06 Proceedings of the 20th conference on Large Installation System Administration
DILIGENT: a digital library infrastructure for supporting joint research
LGDI '05 Proceedings of the 2005 IEEE International Symposium on Mass Storage Systems and Technology
Healthcare Applications Interoperability through Implementation of HL7 Web Service Basic Profile
ITNG '09 Proceedings of the 2009 Sixth International Conference on Information Technology: New Generations
Build, configuration, integration and testing tools for large software projects: ETICS
RISE'06 Proceedings of the 3rd international conference on Rapid integration of software engineering techniques
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Health care software applications deal with several standards that allow institutes to transmit clinical data and images from patients' electronic folders to different hospital sites for diagnosis, medical studies and treatment. Interoperability of these applications is crucial to exchange data and use information over the time, but what actions are required to achieve it in practice are not completely clear. In this paper, we describe a multi-node mechanism that is able to configure an operational scenario of presumable interoperable services, to automatically deploy, install and execute a given scenario and to make adjustments over time as new versions of existing components become available. We show how this mechanism can address interoperability for a specific health care environment, to communicate measures or criteria on the interoperability status amongst services in the domain by generating ad-hoc reports. We detail how a system called ETICS can be extended to support the proposed mechanism in order to run tests for DCMTK and dgate-server amongst different combinations of computers. This provides us with a system to verify interoperability of software applications that belong to different domains.