2008 IEEE Symposium on Computers and Communications
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Abstract

The testability of a protocol standard is a property of the standard that reflects the degree of precision in developing universal interpretation of what it means for an implementation to conform to the standard, and the ability to exercise the implementations of the protocol standard for purposes of assessing their conformance to the standard (Hazem El-Ghendy, et al., November 20-23, 1995). In this paper, we investigate the Conformance Testing Requirements (CTRs) of a protocol standard that result from the formal specification of the allowed (dynamic) behavior of the protocol standard. We focus on those CTRs that are applicable to all the international formal description techniques (FDTs); more specifically, SDL, Lotos, Estelle, and ASN.l. We develop a distinction among Implemenlorpsilas options, Implementerpsilas Choice, and Non-Deterministic Choices as well as testing semantics for each of them. Then, we develop rules for the explicit and precise specification of these CTRs, and for developing a precise and explicit P1X1TP (protocol implementation extra information for testing proforma). These rules are essential for facilitating the controllability and propagation of observability; consequently, enhancing the testability of the protocol standard.
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