Over the years, open source distributions have become increasingly large and complex---as an example, the latest Debian distribution contains almost 30 000 packages. Consequently, the tools that deal with these distribution have also become more and more complex. Furthermore, to deal with increasing distribution sizes optimisation has become more important as well. To make sure that correctness is not sacrificed for complexity and optimisation, it is important to verify the underlying assumptions formally. In this paper, we present an example of such a verification: a formalisation in Coq of a theory of packages and their interdependencies
If software code is developed by humans, can we as users rely on its absolute correctness?\ud \ud To...
Abstract: Problems with portability of applications across various Linux distribu-tions is one of th...
Edit: this version is obsolete, a new version with a larger dataset has been made available. Thi...
Over the years, open source distributions have become increasingly large and complex---as an example...
Abstract: Over the years, open source distributions have become increasingly large and complex—as an...
Over the last two decades, free and open source software has grown considerably. Distributions that ...
The previous two chapters of this book discuss the construction of distributed systems and highlight...
Dans cette thèse nous nous intéressons à intégrer dans la distribution Linux produite par Mandriva u...
Abstract—The automated analysis of variability models in general and feature models in particular is...
Over the years, Free/Libre Open Source Software (FLOSS) distributions have become more and more comp...
Abstract—The automated analysis of variability models in general and feature models in particular is...
During software evolution, the software structure, which mainly consists of modular abstractions (su...
Abstract: Source code size is an estimator of software effort. Size is also often used to calibrate ...
To appearInternational audienceInter-package conflicts require the presence of two or more packages ...
If software code is developed by humans, can we as users rely on its absolute correctness? Today's s...
If software code is developed by humans, can we as users rely on its absolute correctness?\ud \ud To...
Abstract: Problems with portability of applications across various Linux distribu-tions is one of th...
Edit: this version is obsolete, a new version with a larger dataset has been made available. Thi...
Over the years, open source distributions have become increasingly large and complex---as an example...
Abstract: Over the years, open source distributions have become increasingly large and complex—as an...
Over the last two decades, free and open source software has grown considerably. Distributions that ...
The previous two chapters of this book discuss the construction of distributed systems and highlight...
Dans cette thèse nous nous intéressons à intégrer dans la distribution Linux produite par Mandriva u...
Abstract—The automated analysis of variability models in general and feature models in particular is...
Over the years, Free/Libre Open Source Software (FLOSS) distributions have become more and more comp...
Abstract—The automated analysis of variability models in general and feature models in particular is...
During software evolution, the software structure, which mainly consists of modular abstractions (su...
Abstract: Source code size is an estimator of software effort. Size is also often used to calibrate ...
To appearInternational audienceInter-package conflicts require the presence of two or more packages ...
If software code is developed by humans, can we as users rely on its absolute correctness? Today's s...
If software code is developed by humans, can we as users rely on its absolute correctness?\ud \ud To...
Abstract: Problems with portability of applications across various Linux distribu-tions is one of th...
Edit: this version is obsolete, a new version with a larger dataset has been made available. Thi...