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Institute
- Institut für Informatik (143) (remove)
This volume contains those research papers presented at the Second International Conference on Tests and Proofs (TAP 2008) that were not included in the main conference proceedings. TAP was the second conference devoted to the convergence of proofs and tests. It combines ideas from both areas for the advancement of software quality. To prove the correctness of a program is to demonstrate, through impeccable mathematical techniques, that it has no bugs; to test a program is to run it with the expectation of discovering bugs. On the surface, the two techniques seem contradictory: if you have proved your program, it is fruitless to comb it for bugs; and if you are testing it, that is surely a sign that you have given up on any hope of proving its correctness. Accordingly, proofs and tests have, since the onset of software engineering research, been pursued by distinct communities using rather different techniques and tools. And yet the development of both approaches leads to the discovery of common issues and to the realization that each may need the other. The emergence of model checking has been one of the first signs that contradiction may yield to complementarity, but in the past few years an increasing number of research efforts have encountered the need for combining proofs and tests, dropping earlier dogmatic views of their incompatibility and taking instead the best of what each of these software engineering domains has to offer. The first TAP conference (held at ETH Zurich in February 2007) was an attempt to provide a forum for the cross-fertilization of ideas and approaches from the testing and proving communities. For the 2008 edition we found the Monash University Prato Centre near Florence to be an ideal place providing a stimulating environment. We wish to sincerely thank all the authors who submitted their work for consideration. And we would like to thank the Program Committee members as well as additional referees for their great effort and professional work in the review and selection process. Their names are listed on the following pages. In addition to the contributed papers, the program included three excellent keynote talks. We are grateful to Michael Hennell (LDRA Ltd., Cheshire, UK), Orna Kupferman (Hebrew University, Israel), and Elaine Weyuker (AT&T Labs Inc., USA) for accepting the invitation to address the conference. Two very interesting tutorials were part of TAP 2008: "Parameterized Unit Testing with Pex" (J. de Halleux, N. Tillmann) and "Integrating Verification and Testing of Object-Oriented Software" (C. Engel, C. Gladisch, V. Klebanov, and P. Rümmer). We would like to express our thanks to the tutorial presenters for their contribution. It was a team effort that made the conference so successful. We are grateful to the Conference Chair and the Steering Committee members for their support. And we particularly thank Christoph Gladisch, Beate Körner, and Philipp Rümmer for their hard work and help in making the conference a success. In addition, we gratefully acknowledge the generous support of Microsoft Research Redmond, who financed an invited speaker.
Folksonomies are Web 2.0 platforms where users share resources with each other. Furthermore, they can assign keywords (called tags) to the resources for categorizing and organizing the resources. Numerous types of resources like websites (Delicious), images (Flickr), and videos (YouTube) are supported by different folksonomies. The folksonomies are easy to use and thus attract the attention of millions of users. Together with the ease they offer, there are also some problems. This thesis addresses different problems of folksonomies and proposes solutions for these problems. The first problem occurs when users search for relevant resources in folksonomies. Often, the users are not able to find all relevant resources because they don't know which tags are relevant. The second problem is assigning tags to resources. Although many folksonomies (like Delicious) recommend tags for the resources, other folksonomies (like Flickr) do not recommend any tags. Tag recommendation helps the users to easily tag their resources. The third problem is that tags and resources are lacking semantics. This leads for example to ambiguous tags. The tags are lacking semantics because they are freely chosen keywords. The automatic identification of the semantics of tags and resources helps in reducing problems that arise from this freedom of the users in choosing the tags. This thesis proposes methods which exploit semantics to address the problems of search, tag recommendation, and the identification of tag semantics. The semantics are discovered from a variety of sources. In this thesis, we exploit web search engines, online social communities and the co-occurrences of tags as sources of semantics. Using different sources for discovering semantics reduces the efforts to build systems which solve the problems mentioned earlier. This thesis evaluates the proposed methods on a large scale data set. The evaluation results suggest that it is possible to exploit the semantics for improving search, recommendation of tags, and automatic identification of the semantics of tags and resources.
One task of executives and project managers in IT companies or departments is to hire suitable developers and to assign them to suitable problems. In this paper, we propose a new technique that directly leverages previous work experience of developers in a systematic manner. Existing evidence for developer expertise based on the version history of existing projects is analyzed. More specifically, we analyze the commits to a repository in terms of affected API usage. On these grounds, we associate APIs with developers and thus we assess API experience of developers. In transitive closure, we also assess programming domain experience.
Social media provides a powerful way for people to share opinions and sentiments about a specific topic, allowing others to benefit from these thoughts and feelings. This procedure generates a huge amount of unstructured data, such as texts, images, and references that are constantly increasing through daily comments to related discussions. However, the vast amount of unstructured data presents risks to the information-extraction process, and so decision making becomes highly challenging. This is because data overload may cause the loss of useful data due to its inappropriate presentation and its accumulation. To this extent, this thesis contributed to the field of analyzing and detecting feelings in images and texts. And that by extracting the feelings and opinions hidden in a huge collection of image data and texts on social networks After that, these feelings are classified into positive, negative, or neutral, according to the features of the classified data. The process of extracting these feelings greatly helps in decision-making processes on various topics as will be explained in the first chapter of the thesis. A system has been built that can classify the feelings inherent in the images and texts on social media sites, such as people’s opinions about products and companies, personal posts, and general messages. This thesis begins by introducing a new method of reducing the dimension of text data based on data-mining approaches and then examines the sentiment based on neural and deep neural network classification algorithms. Subsequently, in contrast to sentiment analysis research in text datasets, we examine sentiment expression and polarity classification within and across image datasets by building deep neural networks based on the attention mechanism.
Ein Switch (engl. Schalter; auch Weiche) ist eine Netzwerk-Komponente zur Verbindung mehrerer Computer bzw. Netz-Segmente in einem lokalen Netzwerk (LAN). Da Switches den Netzwerkverkehr analysieren und logische Entscheidungen treffen, werden sie auch als intelligente Hubs bezeichnet. Die Funktionsweise eines Switches ist der einer Bridge sehr ähnlich, daher wurde anfangs auch der Begriff Multi-Port-Bridge genutzt 1. Ziel der Diplomarbeit ist es, eine Dokumentation auf die Beine zu stellen, der interessierten Studenten der Informationstechnologie die Möglichkeit bietet, einerseits anhand von physikalischen Switches Administrationsaufgaben nachzuempfinden und andererseits anhand von virtuellen Switches größere Netzwerktopologien aufzubauen. Diese Virtualisierung wird durch das von Virtual Square entwickelte Tool VDE erreicht. Die physikalischen Switches bestehen aus vier Catalyst 3500 XL. Im Laufe dieser Arbeit wird sowohl die Bedienung der einzelnen Systeme untereinander, wie auch die Vernetzung der virtuellen Switches mit den physikalischen Switches erläutert. In diesem Zusammenhang wird auch auf Protokolle und Methoden wie das Spanning Tree Protokoll oder die Virtualisierung eines Netzes durch VLANs eingegangen. Zum Schluss kann der Leser das gelernte in einigen praktischen Aufgaben anwenden.
Rechnernetze gehört zu den Fächern, die ein breites Spektrum an Anwendungsgebieten abdecken. Die vielen unterschiedlichen Protokolle sind Belege dafür. Jedes Protokoll hat sozusagen ein eigenes Anwendungsbereich und doch sind deren Aufgaben unter dem Nenner gleich. Miteinander zu Kommunizieren, Informationen auszutauschen und das möglichst auf eine sichere und schnelle Art und Weise. Als Beispiel denke man an Autos, Handys, Lokale Netze in einem kleinen Betrieb, Intranet in einer größeren Organisation oder in Netze die über Länder hinweggehen. Ein modernes Auto an sich hat schon eine Vielzahl an Bussystemen in sich integriert. CAN, LIN, FlexRay oder MOST Bus sind ein paar Stichworte dazu. Wenn man jetzt von der Autoindustrie weggeht und an die Autonomen Systeme kommt, gibt es dort ein Routing Information Protokoll, das innerhalb von Autonomen Systemen verwendet wird. Routing Information Protokoll ist eines der meist verwendeten Protokolle innerhalb von Autonomen Systemen. Das Routing Information Protokoll ist einer der zentralen Bestandteile des Forschungsbereiches der AG Steigner. Die Arbeit widmet sich unter Anderem dieser Forschungsunterstützung.Diese Studienarbeit hat das Ziel die Testumgebung XTPeer auf die VNUML Version 1.8 zu integrieren.
Semantic descriptions of non-textual media available on the web can be used to facilitate retrieval and presentation of media assets and documents containing them. While technologies for multimedia semantic descriptions already exist, there is as yet no formal description of a high quality multimedia ontology that is compatible with existing (semantic) web technologies. We explain the complexity of the problem using an annotation scenario. We then derive a number of requirements for specifying a formal multimedia ontology, including: compatibility with MPEG-7, embedding in foundational ontologies, and modularisation including separation of document structure from domain knowledge. We then present the developed ontology and discuss it with respect to our requirements.
We aim to demonstrate that automated deduction techniques, in particular those following the model computation paradigm, are very well suited for database schema/query reasoning. Specifically, we present an approach to compute completed paths for database or XPath queries. The database schema and a query are transformed to disjunctive logic programs with default negation, using a description logic as an intermediate language. Our underlying deduction system, KRHyper, then detects if a query is satisfiable or not. In case of a satisfiable query, all completed paths -- those that fulfill all given constraints -- are returned as part of the computed models. The purpose of our approach is to dramatically reduce the workload on the query processor. Without the path completion, a usual XML query processor would search the database for solutions to the query. In the paper we describe the transformation in detail and explain how to extract the solution to the original task from the computed models. We understand this paper as a first step, that covers a basic schema/query reaÂsoning task by model-based deduction. Due to the underlying expressive logic formalism we expect our approach to easily adapt to more sophisticated problem settings, like type hierarchies as they evolve within the XML world.
Hyper tableaux with equality
(2007)
In most theorem proving applications, a proper treatment of equational theories or equality is mandatory. In this paper we show how to integrate a modern treatment of equality in the hyper tableau calculus. It is based on splitting of positive clauses and an adapted version of the superposition inference rule, where equations used for paramodulation are drawn (only) from a set of positive unit clauses, the candidate model. The calculus also features a generic, semantically justified simplification rule which covers many redundancy elimination techniques known from superposition theorem proving. Our main results are soundness and completeness, but we briefly describe the implementation, too.
The Living Book is a system for the management of personalized and scenario specific teaching material. The main goal of the system is to support the active, explorative and selfdetermined learning in lectures, tutorials and self study. The Living Book includes a course on 'logic for computer scientists' with a uniform access to various tools like theorem provers and an interactive tableau editor. It is routinely used within teaching undergraduate courses at our university. This paper describes the Living Book and the use of theorem proving technology as a core component in the knowledge management system (KMS) of the Living Book. The KMS provides a scenario management component where teachers may describe those parts of given documents that are relevant in order to achieve a certain learning goal. The task of the KMS is to assemble new documents from a database of elementary units called 'slices' (definitions, theorems, and so on) in a scenario-based way (like 'I want to prepare for an exam and need to learn about resolution'). The computation of such assemblies is carried out by a model-generating theorem prover for first-order logic with a default negation principle. Its input consists of meta data that describe the dependencies between different slices, and logic-programming style rules that describe the scenario-specific composition of slices. Additionally, a user model is taken into account that contains information about topics and slices that are known or unknown to a student. A model computed by the system for such input then directly specifies the document to be assembled. This paper introduces the elearning context we are faced with, motivates our choice of logic and presents the newly developed calculus used in the KMS.
The model evolution calculus
(2004)
The DPLL procedure is the basis of some of the most successful propositional satisfiability solvers to date. Although originally devised as a proof procedure for first-order logic, it has been used almost exclusively for propositional logic so far because of its highly inefficient treatment of quantifiers, based on instantiation into ground formulas. The recent FDPLL calculus by Baumgartner was the first successful attempt to lift the procedure to the first-order level without resorting to ground instantiations. FDPLL lifts to the first-order case the core of the DPLL procedure, the splitting rule, but ignores other aspects of the procedure that, although not necessary for completeness, are crucial for its effectiveness in practice. In this paper, we present a new calculus loosely based on FDPLL that lifts these aspects as well. In addition to being a more faithful litfing of the DPLL procedure, the new calculus contains a more systematic treatment of universal literals, one of FDPLL's optimizations, and so has the potential of leading to much faster implementations.
Cheops für VNUML - Erstellen und beobachten einer VNUML-Simulation per MausklickrnEs wird untersucht, wie Virtual Network User Mode Linux (VNUML), eine Software zur Simulation von Rechnernetzen, die aus virtualisierten Linux Instanzen aufgebaut werden, für den Benutzer besser handhabbar gemacht werden kann. Mit dem Linux-Paket VNUML, welches die dateigesteuerte Konfiguration virtueller Betriebssysteminstanzen ermöglicht, erhält der Anwender die Möglichkeit, komplexe Netzwerktopologien zu simulieren. Verschiedene Netzwerküberwachungsprogramme werden auf ihre Fähigkeit hin untersucht, eine laufende VNUML-Simulation zu erfassen und sinnvoll abzubilden. Dabei soll der Benutzer einen schnellen Überblick über die Funktion der simulierten Netzwerkumgebung, sowie nach Möglichkeit auch über deren Topologie erhalten können. Das Programm Cheops, welches der Netzwerküberwachung dient, wird erweitert, um nicht nur eine laufende Simulation abbilden und beobachten zu können, sondern darüber hinaus in der Lage zu sein, in jedem Schritt der Arbeit mit VNUML eingesetzt zu werden.
Das erweiterte Programm gestattet sowohl die Erstellung der VNUML-Topologiedatei, als auch das Starten und Steuern der Simulation. Damit werden der lange Kommandozeilenaufruf, sowie das Editieren der Konfigurationsdatei, durch einfach zu benutzende Funktionen in einer grafischen Oberfläche (GUI) ersetzt. Zur schnellen Kontrolle der vollen Funktionsfähigkeit der gestarteten Simulation sind keine weiteren Eingaben oder Konfigurationen nötig. Ebenso kann eine differenzierte Beobachtung verschiedener Netzwerkdienste während der Laufzeit der Simulation erfolgen. Die hierzu nötigen Werkzeuge sind im Paket Cheops für VNUML ebenfalls enthalten und speziell zur Anwendung mit VNUML-Simulationen vorkonfiguriert.
This minor thesis shows a way to optimise a generated oracle to achieve shorter runtimes. Shorter runtimes of test cases allows the execution of more test cases in the same time. The execution of more test cases leads to a higher confidence in the software-quality. Oracles can be derived from specifications. However specifications are used for different purposes and therefore are not necessarily executable. Even if the are executable it might be with only a high runtime. Those two facts come mostly from the use of quantifiers in the logic. If the quantifier-range is not bounded, respectively if the bounds are outside the target language-datatype-limits, the specification is too expressive to be exported into a program. Even if the bounds inside the used datatype-limits, the quantification is represented as a loop which leads to a runtime blowup, especially if quantifiers are nested. This work explains four different possibilities to reduce the execution time of the oracle by manipulating the quantified formular whereas this approach is only applicable if the quantified variables are of type Integer.
E-KRHyper is a versatile theorem prover and model generator for firstorder logic that natively supports equality. Inequality of constants, however, has to be given by explicitly adding facts. As the amount of these facts grows quadratically in the number of these distinct constants, the knowledge base is blown up. This makes it harder for a human reader to focus on the actual problem, and impairs the reasoning process. We extend E-Hyper- underlying E-KRhyper tableau calculus to avoid this blow-up by implementing a native handling for inequality of constants. This is done by introducing the unique name assumption for a subset of the constants (the so called distinct object identifiers). The obtained calculus is shown to be sound and complete and is implemented into the E-KRHyper system. Synthetic benchmarks, situated in the theory of arrays, are used to back up the benefits of the new calculus.
This dissertation introduces a methodology for formal specification and verification of user interfaces under security aspects. The methodology allows to use formal methods pervasively in the specification and verification of human-computer interaction. This work consists of three parts. In the first part, a formal methodology for the description of human-computer interaction is developed. In the second part, existing definitions of computer security are adapted for human-computer interaction and formalized. A generic formal model of human-computer interaction is developed. In the third part, the methodology is applied to the specification and verification of a secure email client.
Das Routing Information Protocol (RIP) ist ein Internet-Standard-Routing-Protokoll, das einst mit zu den am meisten eingesetzten Routing-Protokollen in IP-Netzwerken gehörte. Es basiert auf dem sogenannten Distanzvektoralgorithmus und ist in seiner Funktion und seinem Aufbau sehr einfach ausgelegt. Seit jeher leidet es allerdings unter dem sogenannten Counting-to-Infinity (CTI) Problem, bei dem die Erreichbarkeit einer eigentlich ausgefallenen Verbindung zu einem Ziel scheinbar aufrechterhalten wird. Die Distanz zu diesem Ziel wird aufgrund des fortwährenden Austauschs von nicht mehr gültigen Verbindungsinformationen zwischen in einem Ring geschalteten RIP-Routern hochgezählt, theoretisch bis ins Unendliche. Dabei entstehen Routingschleifen, die den Netzwerkbetrieb erheblich stören können, da die gesendeten Netzwerkpakete aufgrund der Schleife die selben Router immer wieder passieren und weder an ihr eigentliches Ziel gelangen noch verworfen werden können. Die Gefahr des Auftretens des CTI-Problems schränkt die Einsetzbarkeit von RIP enorm ein. Die Netzwerke, in denen RIP eingesetzt wird, können nicht beliebig wachsen, da die maximale Größe des Netzwerks auf eine relativ kleine Distanz zwischen den Routern begrenzt ist, um die Dauer und die Folgen des CTI-Problems im Falle des Auftretens gering zu halten. Je stärker auch die Topologie eines Netzwerks vermascht ist, um mit zusätzlichen, alternativen Verbindungen Ausfällen entgegenzuwirken, umso stärker steigt auch die Gefahr des Auftretens des CTI-Problems nach einem Ausfall. Bislang existierten für RIP lediglich Mechanismen, die das Risiko des Auftretens und die Auswirkungen des CTI-Problems verringern, das Problem selbst aber nicht beheben können. Mit "RIP with minimal topology information" (RIP-MTI) wurde in der AG Rechnernetze an der Universität Koblenz-Landau eine abwärtskompatible Erweiterung zu RIP geschaffen, die das CTI-Problem zu beheben verspricht. Der RIP-MTI-Algorithmus sammelt zusätzliche Informationen über die Topologie des Netzwerks und nutzt diese, um nach dem Ausfall einer Verbindung richtige Informationen über die Erreichbarkeit von Zielen von falschen Informationen unterscheiden zu können. In dieser Diplomarbeit wird die Implementierung des RIP-MTI-Algorithmus behandelt. Mit Hilfe der speziell entwickelten RIP-Netzwerk-Testumgebung XTPeer, in der das CTI-Problem kontrolliert provoziert werden kann, wird die Wirksamkeit der Implementierung eines Quagga RIP-MTI-Routers überprüft und entsprechend weiterentwickelt. Dafür wird der RIP-MTI-Algorithmus an die Implementierung des Quagga RIP-Routing-Software sowie an die der Netzwerk-Testumgebung XTPeer angepasst. Diese Diplomarbeit wird vom Autor selbst als fortgeschrittene Zwischenstation eingestuft, vor der Herstellung und Herausgabe der Implementierung einer RIP-MTI-Routing-Software, die auch in produktiven Netzwerken eingesetzt werden könnte.
SNMP in VNUML Simulationen
(2007)
Das Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP) gilt als die Universalsprache des Netzwerkmanagements. Bereits Anfang der 90er Jahre wurde die erste Version von SNMP durch die Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) zum Standard-Internet Management Protocol erklärt und Teil der TCP/IP Protocol-Suite. Für die meisten Betriebssystemplattformen sind SNMP Implementierungen verfügbar und viele netzwerkfähige Geräte und Netzwerkmanagement-Programme unterstützen SNMP, das sich vor allem für die Verwaltung plattformübergreifender und herstellerunabhängiger Netzwerke bewährt. Virtual Network User Mode Linux (VNUML) ist ein mächtiges Netzwerk-Simulationsprogramm für Linux mit dem virtuelle Linux-Rechnernetze aufgebaut werden können, um darin Programmabläufe zu simulieren. Die VNUML Netzwerk-Simulationen sind in erster Linie für das Entwickeln, Analysieren und Testen von Linux Netzwerk-Software, wie zum Beispiel Netzwerk-Protokollen, geeignet. Das Simulationsprogramm entstand im Rahmen des Euro6IX-Projektes, zur Einführung des IPv6 Standards in Europa, am Telematics Engineering Department der Technischen Universität Madrid. Die Rechner der virtuellen Netze, die VNUML aufbaut, basieren auf User Mode Linux (UML), einer in breitem Spektrum eingesetzten Virtualisierung des Linux-Kernels. Diese Studienarbeit beschäftigt sich mit den Möglichkeiten und der Funktionsweise des Netzwerkmanagements mit SNMP. Dafür wird die SNMP-Software Net-SNMP in VNUML Simulationen eingesetzt, um die Möglichkeiten der Konfiguration und des Umgangs mit SNMP in einer praxisnahen Umgebung zu untersuchen. Der Einsatz von Net-SNMP in VNUML Simulationen kann dazu dienen, die Integration von Netzwerkmanagement mit SNMP für relevante Rechnernetze vorzubereiten und Möglichkeiten der Konfiguration und der Verwendung auszuloten oder VNUML Simulationen im Allgemeinen mit diesem bewährten Netzwerkmanagement-System zur Unterstützung auszustatten.
Avoidance of routing loops
(2009)
We introduce a new routing algorithm which can detect routing loops by evaluating routing updates more thoroughly. Our new algorithm is called Routing with Metric based Topology Investigation (RMTI), which is based on the simple Routing Information Protocol (RIP) and is compatible to all RIP versions. In case of a link failure, a network can reorganize itself if there are redundant links available. Redundant links are only available in a network system like the internet if the topology contains loops. Therefore, it is necessary to recognize and to prevent routing loops. A routing loop can be seen as a circular trace of a routing update information which returns to the same router, either directly from the neighbor router or via a loop topology. Routing loops could consume a large amount of network bandwidth and could impact the endtoend performance of the network. Our RMTI approach is capable to improve the efficiency of Distance Vector Routing.
The University of Koblenz-Landau would like to apply for participation in the RoboCup Mixed Reality League in Suzhou, China 2008. Our team is composed of ten team members and two supervisors. All members are graduate students of Computational Visualistics. Our supervisors are Ph.D. candidates currently researching in the working groups of artificial intelligence and computer graphics.
This thesis proposes the use of MSR (Mining Software Repositories) techniques to identify software developers with exclusive expertise about specific APIs and programming domains in software repositories. A pilot Tool for finding such
“Islands of Knowledge” in Node.js projects is presented and applied in a case study to the 180 most popular npm packages. It is found that on average each package has 2.3 Islands of Knowledge, which is possibly explained by the finding that npm packages tend to have only one main contributor. In a survey, the maintainers of 50 packages are contacted and asked for opinions on the results produced by the Tool. Together with their responses, this thesis reports on experiences made with the pilot Tool and how future iterations could produce even more accurate statements about programming expertise distribution in developer teams.