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May 13, 2002
Computer scientist wins NSF grant for research on software engineering
By Linley Erin Hall
James Whitehead, an assistant professor of computer science, has received a prestigious
award from the National Science Foundation's Faculty Early Career Development (CAREER)
Program. Whitehead will use the grant of $300,000 over five years to support his
research on configuration management systems, which help teams of software developers
coordinate their work on complex projects.
| Configuration management is analogous to document management, in which a word-processing
program is used to save many drafts of a report or other document and to track changes
made by different people. |
Configuration management systems allows those working on a software development project
to make changes and test their effects, to keep track of each version they create,
and to examine the overall project to see how their work interacts with that of others.
Configuration management is analogous to document management, in which a word-processing
program is used to save many drafts of a report or other document and to track changes
made by different people. A single software project may involve 50 to 100 people,
so configuration management systems are usually more complex than document management
systems.
Configuration management is essential to understanding the state of the software
during its development and controlling the changes made to it by different people,
Whitehead said.
"Configuration management is an area where I believe I can make a significant
theoretical contribution," he said.
In the first part of the research project, Whitehead will gather information about
all existing configuration management systems--the "configuration management
domain" in computer science lingo. He will then develop a domain model by analyzing
the existing systems to determine their common features.
Whitehead plans to extend this work to create a unified domain model for configuration
management, document management, knowledge management, hypertext versioning systems,
and engineering (computer-aided drafting) databases. These other domains have many
similarities to configuration management, yet computer scientists working in these
different areas usually do not interact. Whitehead hopes his project will help others
see commonalities and encourage the exchange of ideas between different fields.
In the second part of the project, Whitehead will create a program that automatically
generates configuration management systems based on the domain model he created and
the specific needs of the user.
"Every software project is subtly different, but there's only a fixed number
of configuration management systems," Whitehead said. "If you can auto-generate
them, then you can tailor them to the project."
In addition to conducting research, each CAREER award recipient works toward specific
teaching goals. Whitehead will collaborate with other UCSC faculty to develop undergraduate
courses and a master's program in software engineering. Instruction on configuration
management will figure prominently in both.
Whitehead is also chair of the Web Distributed Authoring and Versioning (WebDAV)
Working Group of the Internet Engineering Task Force. The WebDAV protocol is an extension
of the Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP) that facilitates collaborative authoring
directly on an HTTP server. With this protocol, the World Wide Web becomes a writable
medium rather than a read-only way to download information. Microsoft Office, Adobe
GoLive, and Macromedia Dreamweaver all support the WebDAV protocol.
The CAREER Program grants are the National Science Foundation's most prestigious
awards for new faculty. The CAREER Program recognizes and supports the early career
development activities of faculty members who are most likely to become the academic
leaders of the 21st century.
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