This paper considers the problem of system deviations from requirements specifications. Such deviations may arise from lack of anticipation of possible behaviors of environment agents at specification time, or from evoking conditions in this environment. We discuss an architecture and a development process for monitoring system requirements at runtime to reconcile the requirements and the system's behavior. This process is deployed on three scenarios of requirements-execution reconciliation for the Meeting Scheduler system. The work builds on our previous work on goal-driven requirements engineering and on runtime requirements monitoring
%0 Conference Paper
%1 feather98b
%A Feather, M. S.
%A Fickas, Stephen
%A van Lamsweerde, Axel
%A Ponsard, C.
%B Ninth IEEE International Workshop on Software Specification and Design (IWSSD-9)
%C Isobe, JP
%D 1998
%K dynamic evolution goal requirements
%P 50--59
%T Reconciling system requirements and runtime behaviour
%U http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/search/srchabstract.jsp?arnumber=667919&isnumber=14647&punumber=5418&k2dockey=667919@ieeecnfs&query=%28%28van+lamsweerde%29%3Cin%3Emetadata%29&pos=13
%X This paper considers the problem of system deviations from requirements specifications. Such deviations may arise from lack of anticipation of possible behaviors of environment agents at specification time, or from evoking conditions in this environment. We discuss an architecture and a development process for monitoring system requirements at runtime to reconcile the requirements and the system's behavior. This process is deployed on three scenarios of requirements-execution reconciliation for the Meeting Scheduler system. The work builds on our previous work on goal-driven requirements engineering and on runtime requirements monitoring
@inproceedings{feather98b,
abstract = {This paper considers the problem of system deviations from requirements specifications. Such deviations may arise from lack of anticipation of possible behaviors of environment agents at specification time, or from evoking conditions in this environment. We discuss an architecture and a development process for monitoring system requirements at runtime to reconcile the requirements and the system's behavior. This process is deployed on three scenarios of requirements-execution reconciliation for the Meeting Scheduler system. The work builds on our previous work on goal-driven requirements engineering and on runtime requirements monitoring},
added-at = {2007-03-19T18:55:14.000+0100},
address = {Isobe, JP},
author = {Feather, M. S. and Fickas, Stephen and van Lamsweerde, Axel and Ponsard, C.},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2c6873776a8ecbf8517b730cd81f1afb4/neilernst},
booktitle = {Ninth IEEE International Workshop on Software Specification and Design (IWSSD-9)},
citeulike-article-id = {159263},
description = {sdasda},
interhash = {95afde8e7d250e86c114dbdb46f7d90b},
intrahash = {c6873776a8ecbf8517b730cd81f1afb4},
keywords = {dynamic evolution goal requirements},
month = {April},
pages = {50--59},
priority = {0},
timestamp = {2007-03-19T18:55:14.000+0100},
title = {Reconciling system requirements and runtime behaviour},
url = {http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/search/srchabstract.jsp?arnumber=667919\&isnumber=14647\&punumber=5418\&k2dockey=667919@ieeecnfs\&query=%28%28van+lamsweerde%29%3Cin%3Emetadata%29\&pos=13},
year = 1998
}