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Description
An Introduction to TTCN-3 is the perfect companion to the available TTCN-3 language standards.

The third revision of TTCN combines the best parts of previous versions with a powerful new textual syntax to create a universal testing language, whose application has been widened beyond communication systems to areas such as the automotive industry, IP/Internet, railway signalling and avionics.

An Introduction to TTCN-3 gives a solid introduction to the TTCN-3 language and its use, guiding readers through the TTCN-3 standards, methodologies and tools with examples and advice based on the authors’ extensive real-world experience.  All the important concepts and constructs of the language are explained in a step-by-step, tutorial style, and the authors relate the testing language to the overall test system implementation, giving the bigger picture.  

Read on for:

  • a detailed, easily accessible overview of the TTCN-3 standards.
  • advice on how to use TTCN-3 including style guides and advice on structuring .
  • guidance on the dangers and pitfalls to avoid when employing TTCN-3.
  • numerous practical examples of how to apply the technology.
  • an associated web site containing code samples from the book and links to relevant standards documents.

An Introduction to TTCN-3 is the perfect reference guide for telecommunications and software engineers, graduate students in software engineering and telecommunications, and standards professionals who would like to get familiar with this new language.

About the Author
Colin Willcock is a Senior Research Manager at Nokia Research Center. He received a BSc from Sheffield University in 1986, an MSc from Edinburgh University in 1987, and a PhD in parallel computation from the University of Kent in 1992. Colin was part of the core ETSI team that developed the TTCN-3 language and is currently participating in TTCN-3 language maintenance. In the past, he has worked on numerous standardization efforts at ETSI, ITU-T, and 3GPP, focusing on various aspects of formal specification languages. He is currently leading the European TT-medal project, which strives to improve test methodology and languages for software-intensive systems. Within Nokia, he works as competence area manager for modelling and engineering methods.

Thomas Deiß is a Principal Scientist at Nokia Research Center. He received an MSc in Computer Science and a PhD in Natural Sciences from the University of Kaiserslautern in 1990 and 1999. He is currently working in the area of testingmobile communication systems with TTCN-2 and TTCN-3. Thomas has been developing TTCN-3-based test systems, has developed course materials and taught courses about TTCN-3, and has contributed to TTCN-3 standardization. He is a contributor to the European TT-medal project, which strives to improve test methodology and languages for software-intensive systems.

Until March 2005, Stephan Tobies has worked as a Senior Research Engineer at Nokia Research Center. He received an MSc in Computer Science and a PhD in Natural Sciences from the University of Technology in Aachen in 1998 and 2001. He has been a member of ETSI Strategic Task Force 253, which is responsible for the maintenance and extension of the TTCN-3 standard. He has been a leading developer of an industry-grade TTCN-3 tool and has been working in the area of TTCN-3 language development and test system implementation. Stephan is now working for the European Microsoft Innovation Center.

Stefan Keil is a Research Engineer at Nokia Research Center. He received an MSc in Electrical Engineering from the Ruhr University in Bochum in 1996. Stefan has worked for Alcatel as a programmer in the field of fixed line communications and a technical trainer for broadband communication fibre technology. Since 2000 he has been working for Nokia in the area of test system implementation, TTCN-3 tool development, and training.

Until December 2004, Federico Engler has been a Principal Engineer at Nokia Research Center. He studied computer science at Uppsala University from 1989 till 1993. After that, he started working for Telelogic, where he was involved in standardization issues around TTCN-2, TTCN-3, and ASN.1, as well as TTCN-3 tool development. In January 2003, Federico started working for Nokia in the area of automated test solutions, which involved the mapping, documentation, and synchronization of testrelated activities at a Nokia-wide level.He has also been involved in activities around improved visualization and documentation of tests and test results within Nokia.

Stephan Schulz is a Senior Research Engineer at Nokia Research Center. He received a BSc in Electrical Engineering from State University of New York at Binghamton in 1995 and an MSc and PhD in Computer Engineering from University of Arizona at Tucson in 1997 and 2001. He has been an editor of the TTCN-3 Runtime Interface (TRI) standard and hasmade a number of contributions in the field of TTCN-3-based text-based protocol testing. Stephan has been developing and teaching TTCN-3 courses for Nokia engineers. Currently, he is one of the main architects in the ETSI design team of a TTCN-3 IPv6 testing library.