4.6 Article

The SATIN component system - A metamodel for engineering adaptable mobile systems

Journal

IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON SOFTWARE ENGINEERING
Volume 32, Issue 11, Pages 910-927

Publisher

IEEE COMPUTER SOC
DOI: 10.1109/TSE.2006.115

Keywords

distributed objects; components; containers; mobile systems; middleware; pervasive computing; mobile code

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Mobile computing devices, such as personal digital assistants and mobile phones, are becoming increasingly popular, smaller, and more capable. We argue that mobile systems should be able to adapt to changing requirements and execution environments. Adaptation requires the ability to reconfigure the deployed code base on a mobile device. Such reconfiguration is considerably simplified if mobile applications are component-oriented rather than monolithic blocks of code. We present the SATIN (System Adaptation Targeting Integrated Networks) component metamodel, a lightweight local component metamodel that offers the flexible use of logical mobility primitives to reconfigure the software system by dynamically transferring code. The metamodel is implemented in the SATIN middleware system, a component-based mobile computing middleware that uses the mobility primitives defined in the metamodel to reconfigure both itself and applications that it hosts. We demonstrate the suitability of SATIN in terms of lightweightedness, flexibility, and reusability for the creation of adaptable mobile systems by using it to implement, port, and evaluate a number of existing and new applications, including an active network platform developed for satellite communication at the European Space Agency. These applications exhibit different aspects of adaptation and demonstrate the flexibility of the approach and the advantages gained.

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