Documenting Software Architectures: Views and Beyond
Publisher: Addison-Wesley Professional(October, 2010) | 592 pages | English |
0321552687 | PDF | 17.5MB
揟his new edition is brighter, shinier, more complete, more pragmatic, more focused than the previous one, and I wouldn抰 have thought it possible to improve on the original. As the field of software architecture has grown over these past decades, there is much more to be said, much more that we know, and much more that we can reflect upon of what抯 worked and what hasn抰梐nd the authors here do all that, and more.?br />
桭rom the Foreword by Grady Booch, IBM Fellow
Software architecture梩he conceptual glue that holds every phase of a project together for its many stakeholders梚s widely recognized as a critical element in modern software development. Practitioners have increasingly discovered that close attention to a software system抯 architecture pays valuable dividends. Without an architecture that is appropriate for the problem being solved, a project will stumble along or, most likely, fail. Even with a superb architecture, if that architecture is not well understood or well communicated the project is unlikely to succeed.
Documenting Software Architectures, Second Edition, provides the most complete and current guidance, independent of language or notation, on how to capture an architecture in a commonly understandable form. Drawing on their extensive experience, the authors first help you decide what information to document, and then, with guidelines and examples (in various notations, including UML), show you how to express an architecture so that others can successfully build, use, and maintain a system from it. The book features rules for sound documentation, the goals and strategies of documentation, architectural views and styles, documentation for software interfaces and software behavior, and templates for capturing and organizing information to generate a coherent package. New and improved in this second edition:
Coverage of architectural styles such as service-oriented architectures, multi-tier architectures, and data models
Guidance for documentation in an Agile development environment
Deeper treatment of documentation of rationale, reflecting best industrial practices
Improved templates, reflecting years of use and feedback, and more documentation layout options
A new, comprehensive example (available online), featuring documentation of a Web-based service-oriented system
Reference guides for three important architecture documentation languages: UML, AADL, and SySML.
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