| By Tad Anderson | Article Rating: |
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| October 26, 2012 10:54 PM EDT | Reads: |
1,109 |
| I have attempted to learn AADL and how to use OSATE several times over the years. I would read a good article on it and think to myself I can figure it out this time. A day or two into the adventure I would get frustrated with the toolset and getting it configured correctly, and the scattered and confusing details of AADL would put the nail in the coffin of my past attempts. I was hoping this book would not have me repeating history. I am glad to report it didn't. Finally a resource that puts AADL information into a learnable format. The book starts off with a nice introduction to model-based software systems engineering and does a good job of putting a AADL into context by comparing it to SysML, VHDL, and UML. The book is broken down into two main parts and then has some appendixes. I have listed the parts along with the chapters they contain below. Part I. Model-Based Engineering and the AADL Chapter 1. Model-Based Software Systems Engineering Chapter 2. Working with the SAE AADL Chapter 3. Modeling and Analysis with the AADL: The Basics Chapter 4. Applying AADL Capabilities Part II. Elements of the AADL Chapter 5. Defining AADL Components Chapter 6. Software Components Chapter 7. Execution Platform Components Chapter 8. Composite and Generic Components Chapter 9. Static and Dynamic Architecture Chapter 10. Component Interactions Chapter 11. System Flows and Software Deployment Chapter 12. Organizing Models Chapter 13. Annotating Models Chapter 14. Extending the Language Chapter 15. Creating and Validating Models Appendixes Appendix A. Syntax and Property Summary Appendix B. Additional Resources Appendix C. References The book is broken down into a nice logical flow that starts with simple models and as it continues the authors grow the models complexity. In Part I the authors use a sample system that builds a powerboat autopilot architecture. By the end of Part I you have a detailed understanding of the AADL capabilities. In Part II the authors take you on a detailed tour of all the critical elements in AADL. After a describing the different categories the AADL components fall into the authors spend several chapters going into great detail on how to use them. The book includes a big appendix that summarizes AADL syntax and grammar rules, lists the component type and implementation elements, lists the basic property types and type constructors, lists the AADL reserved words, and the AADL properties. The authors have a really good writing style which makes the content not only easier read but also easy to understand. There were only two things that would have made life easier while learning AADL using the book. The authors should make the samples used throughout the book available online for download. There is a lot of typing to do to get the examples working. The second thing is better coverage of configuring the Open Source AADL Tool Environment (OSATE) used to create the models in the book. The best thing to do is to download TOPCASED (do yourself a favor and download and run the RCP downloads), then install OSATE2, Xtext, and ADELE using the Eclipse Install New Software feature on the Help menu, and uninstall OSATE1 which comes with TOPCASED using the Installation Details button on the About Eclipse dialog. These two dings don't take anything away from the book, and they probably made me use the tool more and therefore learn more about the tool than had they spoon fed me. This book is literally the only book on the market available for learning AADL. Luckily it's a great resource and by reading it cover to cover, working through the exercises, and building the models you will definitely learn the AADL language. I highly recommend the book to anyone who wants to learn AADL!!! | Model-Based Engineering with AADL: An Introduction to the SAE Architecture Analysis & Design Language |
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Published October 26, 2012 Reads 1,109
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Tad Anderson has been doing Software Architecture for 16 years and Enterprise Architecture for the past few.
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