Authors & Contributors
Eclipse plug-ins used
At this point, we would like to thank the developers of the following frameworks, which we have used in order to develop Wodel-Test:
- Xtext: Xtext tailors the development of programming languages and domain-specific languages. With Xtext you define your language using a powerful grammar language.
- Sirius: Sirius allows you to easily create your own graphical modeling workbench by leveraging the Eclipse Modeling technologies, including EMF and GMF.
- Epsilon: Epsilon is a family of Java-based scripting languages for automating common model-based software engineering tasks, such as code generation, model-to-model transformation and model validation, that work out of the box with EMF (including Xtext and Sirius), UML (including Cameo/MagicDraw), Simulink, XML and other types of models.
- OCL Tools: Eclipse OCL is an implementation of the Object Constraint Language (OCL) OMG standard for EMF-based models.
- Acceleo: Acceleo is a template-based technology including authoring tools to create custom code generators. It allows you to automatically produce any kind of source code from any data source available in EMF format.
- MoDisco: Eclipse MoDisco provides an extensible framework to elaborate on model-driven solutions supporting software reverse engineering and modernization use cases such as technical migration, software improvement, documentation generation, quality insurance, etc.
- ATL: ATL (ATL Transformation Language) is a model transformation language and toolkit. In the field of Model-Driven Engineering (MDE), ATL provides ways to produce a set of target models from a set of source models.
- AnATLyzer: AnATLyzer is a powerful static analyser for ATL. It is available as an Eclipse plug-in which extends the ATL IDE with features to enhance developer productivity.
- Conga: CONGA is an MDE solution to implement chatbots.
- emfjson: The emf-json project is actually an umbrella of projects that aim to provide support for the JSON format, and associated technologies, to the Eclipse Modeling Framework. It is an alternative to the default XML serialization format (XMI) used by default by the Eclipse Modeling Frameworks.
Authors
The Wodel-Test research project was started by the miso research group in October 2017. Since then, the project has been carried out by Pablo Gómez-Abajo, under the supervision of Esther Guerra and Juan de Lara, and, additionally, during his PhD. studies, of Mercedes Merayo.
Current
Pablo Gómez-Abajo is an Assistant Professor at the Department of Computer Science of the Universidad Autónoma de Madrid. After around 8 years working in the industry, he returned to Academia and joined the modelling and software engineering research group (https://miso.es) in 2015. Contact him at Pablo.GomezA@uam.es, or visit https://www.gomezabajo.es.
Esther Guerra is Full Professor at the Department of Computer Science of the Universidad Autónoma de Madrid. Together with Juan de Lara, she leads the modelling and software engineering research group (https://miso.es). She is interested in flexible modelling, meta-modelling, domain specific languages and model transformation. Contact her at Esther.Guerra@uam.es, or visit http://www.ii.uam.es/~eguerra.
Juan de Lara is Full Professor at the Department of Computer Science of the Universidad Autónoma de Madrid. Together with Esther Guerra, he leads the modelling and software engineering research group (https://miso.es). His research interests are in model-driven engineering and automated software development. Contact him at Juan.deLara@uam.es, or visit http://arantxa.ii.uam.es/~jlara/.
Past
Mercedes Merayo holds an Associate Professor position in the Computer Systems and Computation Department of the Universidad Complutense de Madrid. She leads, together with Luis Llana the Design and Testing of Reliable Systems research group. Her current research interests include model based testing, distributed testing, asynchronous testing, mutation testing, metamorphic testing and timed extensions in formal testing. Contact her at mgmerayo@fdi.ucm.es, or visit http://antares.sip.ucm.es/mercedes/.
Acknowledgements
We would like to especially thank Sara Pérez-Soler and Pablo C. Cañizares for their collaboration in the work of Wodel-Test for Chatbots.
We would also like to especially thank Faezeh Khorram for her feedback and very useful interactions with both the Wodel tool and the Wodel-Test framework.