TY - GEN
T1 - Second International Workshop on Variability and Evolution of Software-Intensive Systems (VariVolution 2019)
AU - Nieke, Michael
AU - Linsbauer, Lukas
AU - Krüger, Jacob
AU - Leich, Thomas
N1 - DBLP License: DBLP's bibliographic metadata records provided through http://dblp.org/ are distributed under a Creative Commons CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedication. Although the bibliographic metadata records are provided consistent with CC0 1.0 Dedication, the content described by the metadata records is not. Content may be subject to copyright, rights of privacy, rights of publicity and other restrictions.
PY - 2019
Y1 - 2019
N2 - Most of today’s software systems evolve continuously and need to exist in various variants to address different requirements. However, changes resulting from evolution in time (i.e., revisions) and changes resulting from evolution in space (i.e., variants) are managed completely differently. In particular, no traditional technology for version management provides convenient means to effectively and efficiently support unified revision and variant management. Researchers from various communities have proposed new concepts and techniques to tackle this problem. Especially the communities of software configuration management, software product lines, and software versioning are working on such a unified technology. For example, variation control systems have been proposed to systematically manage revisions and variants based on a unified perspective of evolution in time and space. VariVolution (the 2nd International Workshop on Variability and Evolution of Software-Intensive Systems) aims to gather researchers and practitioners that are working on or interested in software evolution and variability. The workshop offers an opportunity to exchange ideas, report real-world cases and problems, and initiate new research directions and collaborations.
AB - Most of today’s software systems evolve continuously and need to exist in various variants to address different requirements. However, changes resulting from evolution in time (i.e., revisions) and changes resulting from evolution in space (i.e., variants) are managed completely differently. In particular, no traditional technology for version management provides convenient means to effectively and efficiently support unified revision and variant management. Researchers from various communities have proposed new concepts and techniques to tackle this problem. Especially the communities of software configuration management, software product lines, and software versioning are working on such a unified technology. For example, variation control systems have been proposed to systematically manage revisions and variants based on a unified perspective of evolution in time and space. VariVolution (the 2nd International Workshop on Variability and Evolution of Software-Intensive Systems) aims to gather researchers and practitioners that are working on or interested in software evolution and variability. The workshop offers an opportunity to exchange ideas, report real-world cases and problems, and initiate new research directions and collaborations.
U2 - 10.1145/3336294.3342367
DO - 10.1145/3336294.3342367
M3 - Conference contribution
SP - 43:1
BT - International Systems and Software Product Line Conference (SPLC)
PB - Association for Computing Machinery, Inc
ER -