Abstract: In the field of software architecture, there has been a paradigm shift from describing structural information, such as components and connectors, to documenting architectural knowledge (AK), such as design decisions and rationale. To this end, a series of industrial and academic domain models have been proposed for defining the concepts and their relationships in the field of AK. To a large extent the merit of this new paradigm is to share and reuse AK across organizations, especially in geographically distributed settings. However, the employment of different AK domain models by different parties makes effective AK sharing challenging, as it needs to be mapped from one domain model to another. In this paper, we investigate two different approaches for sharing AK, based on either direct or indirect mapping between different AK domain models. We compare the cost and quality of these two approaches, with respect to the processing of large amounts of AK instances. To predict the quality and costs of this processing in advance, a prediction model is proposed and validated with a concrete AK sharing case. Based on the comparison results, stakeholders involved with AK sharing can select an appropriate approach by trading off quality and cost in their own context.
Peng Liang, Anton Jansen, Paris Avgeriou. 2009. Sharing architecture knowledge through models: quality and cost. The Knowledge Engineering Review. 24:38 doi: 10.1017/S0269888909990038
Peng Liang, Anton Jansen, Paris Avgeriou. 2009. Sharing architecture knowledge through models: quality and cost. The Knowledge Engineering Review. 24:38 doi: 10.1017/S0269888909990038
Abstract: Abstract: In the field of software architecture, there has been a paradigm shift from describing structural information, such as components and connectors, to documenting architectural knowledge (AK), such as design decisions and rationale. To this end, a series of industrial and academic domain models have been proposed for defining the concepts and their relationships in the field of AK. To a large extent the merit of this new paradigm is to share and reuse AK across organizations, especially in geographically distributed settings. However, the employment of different AK domain models by different parties makes effective AK sharing challenging, as it needs to be mapped from one domain model to another. In this paper, we investigate two different approaches for sharing AK, based on either direct or indirect mapping between different AK domain models. We compare the cost and quality of these two approaches, with respect to the processing of large amounts of AK instances. To predict the quality and costs of this processing in advance, a prediction model is proposed and validated with a concrete AK sharing case. Based on the comparison results, stakeholders involved with AK sharing can select an appropriate approach by trading off quality and cost in their own context.
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Acknowledgments
This research has been partially sponsored by the Dutch Joint Academic and Commercial Quality Research & Development (Jacquard) program on Software Engineering Research via contract 638.001.406 GRIFFIN: a GRId For inFormatIoN about architectural knowledge, and Peng Liang is funded by the project Hefboom 641.000.405. The authors would like to thank Astron for their support and access to the LOFAR software architecture documents.
LOFAR is the abbreviation of Low Frequency Array project undertaken by Astron, the Dutch Astronomy Institute, which is involved in the development of large software-intensive systems used for astronomy research.
Peng Liang, Anton Jansen, Paris Avgeriou. 2009. Sharing architecture knowledge through models: quality and cost. The Knowledge Engineering Review. 24:38 doi: 10.1017/S0269888909990038
Peng Liang, Anton Jansen, Paris Avgeriou. 2009. Sharing architecture knowledge through models: quality and cost. The Knowledge Engineering Review. 24:38 doi: 10.1017/S0269888909990038
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Peng Liang, Anton Jansen, Paris Avgeriou. 2009. Sharing architecture knowledge through models: quality and cost. The Knowledge Engineering Review. 24:38 doi: 10.1017/S0269888909990038
Peng Liang, Anton Jansen, Paris Avgeriou. 2009. Sharing architecture knowledge through models: quality and cost. The Knowledge Engineering Review. 24:38 doi: 10.1017/S0269888909990038