SWAMP is a java-based workflow engine. The workflows are defined in an XML format, with with focus on great flexibility and the possibility for quick and frequent changes.
The workflow engine is running on a central server, with a web-GUI and a SOAP interface for human interaction and for connecting it to other systems.
Zebra is a workflow engine - originally developed to fill in the gaps in some commercial and open source workflow engines. The key differences between it and other workflow systems are
* Able to model all the workflows described in workflow patterns
* An easy to use GUI designer
* Interfaced persistence layer
* OO Design
* Integration component for Turbine web applications
Azuki is a framework designed to resolve various known problems in the software development lifecycle :
* Customizing an application without modifying the source code.
* Simplifying the integration of new technologies.
* Simplifying application maintenance.
* Simplifying application deployment.
* Separating contributors in a complex development project.
* Separating technical code from purely operationna
A little bit outdated (2005): "We (Svetozar Misljencevic & Dusty Lefèvre) are developing a profiler for Java (1.5 and greater) that will be able to selectively trace an application (by selecting the classes and events to log) and log it's actions for analysis using the JVMTI interface. In the first phase we will implement this functionality. In the second phase we will add monitors for the (real-time) internal state of the Java Virtual Machine.
This project is part of our studies so we cannot accept any external help, for the moment..."
yEd is a very powerful graph editor that is written entirely in the Java programming language. It can be used to quickly and effectively generate drawings and to apply automatic layouts to a range of different diagrams and networks.
E. Sekerinski, and R. Zurob. &\#171;UML&\#187; '01: Proceedings of the 4th International Conference on The Unified Modeling Language, Modeling Languages, Concepts, and Tools, page 376--390. London, UK, Springer-Verlag, (2001)