Abstract
Modern information systems rely more and more on combining concurrent, distributed, mobile and heterogenous components. This move from old systems, typically conceived in isolation, induces the need for new languages and software architectures. In particular, coordination languages have been proposed to cleanly separate computational aspects and communication. On the other hand, software architects face the problem of specifying and reasoning about non-functional requirements. All these issues are widely perceived as fundamental to improve software productivity, to enhance maintainability, to advocate modularity, to promote reusability, and to lead to systems more tractable and more amenable to verification and global analysis.The FOCLASA workshop was organized on August 24th 2002 as a satellite event of Concur'02 with the aim of bringing together researchers working on the foundations of component-based computing, coordination, and software architectures.This volume contains selected 12 papers presented at the workshop. They were reviewed by the program committee, consisting, besides the editors, of •Rocco De Nicola (University of Firenze, Italy)•Jos Luiz Fiadeiro (ATX Software and University of Lisbon, Portugal)•Roberto Gorrieri (University of Bologna, Italy)•Paola Inverardi (University L'Aquila, Italy)•Joost Kok (University of Leiden, The Netherlands)•Antonio Porto (New University of Lisbon, Portugal)We would like to thank them together with the authors of the papers for their contribution to the meeting. We would also like to thank Michael Mislove for his help in editing this volume. Finally, we are grateful to L. Brim, M. Kretinsky, and A. Kucera for their help in organizing the workshop in Brno.
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