Services and capabilities features Sample Clauses

Services and capabilities features. The cardinality-based feature Service [1, n] allows the developer to implement 1 to n instances of services in his/her SP. Each instance has a name that is mod- eled by its child feature attribute Service name. It also has a cardinality-based feature Capability [1, n]. The latter allows the developer to implement 1 to n instances of capabilities in each service instance. The other features of FMSP are modeled as child features to each capability instance. Hence, it would be possible to configure the variability of each capability instance differently and independently. In FMSP , each capability can be configured with 372904 differ- ent possible configurations, in particular, with different 790 valid compounds of the 16 modeled DPs. Each capability has a name that is modeled by the feature attribute Ca- pability name. The optional features Input and Output and their children permit to model the information about the input and output data of each ca- pability. If these features have been omitted by the developer when deriving a given capability in his/her SP, then this capability will not accept any input data from SCs and will not return any result. In this case, the signature of this capability will be: void capabilityName(). The cardinality-based features IData [1, n] and OData [1, n] specify the count of the input and output data of each capability. These features contain in particular the feature attributes IValue and OValue, respectively. The sole objective of the mandatory feature attribute IValue is to inform the SCs that they must provide an input value in the body of their request messages to invoke a given capability. The optional feature attribute OValue gives the choice to the SP developer to specify a static result of capabilities. In fact, capabilities often have dynamic results that are defined in the business logic of capabilities. In this case, the feature attribute OValue can be omitted by the developer when deriving his/her SP. However, this feature attribute can be useful to test if a given capability, with a given configuration, can be invoked correctly by SCs. To implement a SP, it is important to permit the SP capabilities to take and return objects (classes instances) as input and output data. In this context, the classes that encapsulate these data need to be implemented as serializable so their objects can be included in the SP and SC messages. We note that the use of serializable classes is widely supported by the programming lang...
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