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Software Systems Architecture: Working With Stakeholders Using Viewpoints and Perspectives, 2nd Edition

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Product Author Bios

Nick Rozanski, Barclays Capital Architect for Fixed Income Rates IT, previously led the Enterprise Architecture Group for Barclays Global Investors (BGI). Throughout his 25-year career, he has worked for Marks and Spencer, Logica, Capgemini, and Sybase; and has served in roles ranging from technical instructor to certified internal project auditor. Eoin Woods, head of application architecture at a major fund manager, recently designed the firm's new equities portfolio management system. His interests include software architecture, computer security, and data management. He has worked in software engineering for companies including Ford Motor Company, Groupe Bull, InterTrust, and Sybase.

Software Systems Architecture, Second Edition is a highly regarded, practitioner-oriented guide to designing and implementing effective architectures for information systems. It is both a readily accessible introduction to software architecture and an invaluable handbook of well-established best practices.

 

With this book you will learn how to

  • Design and communicate an architecture that reflects and balances the different needs of its stakeholders
  • Focus on architecturally significant aspects of design, including frequently overlooked areas such as performance, resilience, and location
  • Use scenarios and patterns to drive the creation and validation of your architecture
  • Document your architecture as a set of related views

 

Reflecting new standards and developments in the field, this new edition extends and updates much of the content, and

  • Adds a “system context viewpoint” that documents the system’s interactions with its environment
  • Expands the discussion of architectural principles, showing how they can be used to provide traceability and rationale for architectural decisions
  • Explains how agile development and architecture can work together
  • Positions requirements and architecture activities in the project context
  • Presents a new lightweight method for architectural validation

 

Whether you are an aspiring or practicing software architect, you will find yourself referring repeatedly to the practical advice in this book throughout the lifecycle of your projects. A supporting Web site containing further information can be found at www.viewpoints-and-perspectives.info.

Customer Reviews

7 of 7 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars My new standard architecture framework, February 6, 2012
By 
W. Alan McBee "->Alan" (Elk Grove, CA USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Software Systems Architecture: Working With Stakeholders Using Viewpoints and Perspectives (2nd Edition) (Hardcover)
I want to start by countering the negative review that is currently viewed as the most helpful here on Amazon. The reviewer did not like that the book did not seem to address most directly what would be needed by "project managers, team leads and most importantly developers."

I'm going to suggest that the reviewer started reading the book with a preconceived notion of what a software architect is, and what software architecture is about. It's no surprise. I'm reading several books on software architecture; all of them confront and try to address what might be a common definition, given that there are so many ambiguous definitions throughout the world.

The authors of this book make clear that ALL of the stakeholders in a software project must be appropriately addressed. That's a huge challenge! From business executives to analysts to even project managers, team leads, and developer, all of them must share a common understanding of the entire system and what will... Read more
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars The BEST Software Architecture Book Available, March 2, 2013
By 
T. Anderson (PA USA) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (TOP 1000 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Software Systems Architecture: Working With Stakeholders Using Viewpoints and Perspectives (2nd Edition) (Hardcover)
Some might look at my book collect and think I have hoarding issues. If I had to pick just one Software Architecture book to keep, this would be the one.

This is the second edition of one of the best books written on software systems architecture. If you are in the software development industry, you should read this book. If you are a Software Architect, you must read this book.

This book covers a vast amount of material but it ties it all together in a way that paints a complete picture of what software systems architecture is all about.

The book starts out covering architecture fundamentals. There is a chapter on Software Architecture Concepts, Viewpoints and Views, Architectural Perspectives, and The Role of the Software Architect.

It then presents a process for software architecture and explains all the elements involved with the process. This part of the book contains chapters on The Architecture Definition Process, Concerns, Principles... Read more
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Exceptional Briefing, January 29, 2013
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Software Systems Architecture: Working With Stakeholders Using Viewpoints and Perspectives (2nd Edition) (Hardcover)
This was an exceptional review on the entire practice of Architecture. Throughout this work, the authors provide very detailed (yet easy to read) guidance on every element of view-based architecture. This book provides an enterprise perspective of the practice of architecture and outlines all of the things to watch out for at various stages of system design.

I would recommend this book both as a comprehensive briefing as well as a reference book if you are an architect.
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Online Sample Chapter

Software Systems Architecture: Viewpoints and Views

Table of Contents

Preface to the Second Edition         xv

Acknowledgments for the Second Edition         xvi

 

Preface to the First Edition           xvii

Acknowledgments         xx

 

Chapter 1: Introduction        1

Stakeholders, Viewpoints, and Perspectives   1

The Structure of This Book   7

Who Should Read This Book   7

Conventions Used   8

 

Part I: Architecture Fundamentals          9

Chapter 2: Software Architecture Concepts        11

Software Architecture   11

Architectural Elements   20

Stakeholders   21

Architectural Descriptions   24

Relationships between the Core Concepts   26

Summary   27

Further Reading   28

 

Chapter 3: Viewpoints and Views         31

Architectural Views   34

Viewpoints   36

Relationships between the Core Concepts   37

The Benefits of Using Viewpoints and Views   38

Viewpoint Pitfalls   39

Our Viewpoint Catalog   39

Summary   43

Further Reading   43

 

Chapter 4: Architectural Perspectives        45

Quality Properties   45

Architectural Perspectives   47

Applying Perspectives to Views   51

Consequences of Applying a Perspective   54

Relationships between the Core Concepts   56

The Benefits of Using Perspectives   56

Perspective Pitfalls   58

Comparing Perspectives to Viewpoints   58

Our Perspective Catalog   60

Summary   61

Further Reading   62

 

Chapter 5: The Role Of The Software Architect         63

The Architecture Definition Process   64

The Role of the Architect   68

Interrelationships between the Core Concepts   71

Architectural Specializations   72

The Organizational Context   73

The Architect’s Skills   76

The Architect’s Responsibilities   77

Summary   78

Further Reading   79

 

Part II: The Process of Software Architecture        81

Chapter 6: Introduction to the Software Architecture Process         83

 

Chapter 7: The Architecture Definition Process        85

Guiding Principles 85

Process Outcomes 86

The Process Context 87

Supporting Activities 89

Architecture Definition Activities 92

Process Exit Criteria 97

Architecture Definition in the Software Development Lifecycle 98

Summary 102

Further Reading 103

 

Chapter 8: Concerns, Principles, and Decisions        105

Problem-Focused Concerns   108

Solution-Focused Concerns   111

Other Real-World Constraints   114

What Makes a Good Concern   116

Architectural Principles   117

Architectural Decisions   122

Using Principles to Link Concerns and Decisions   125

Checklist   128

Summary   128

Further Reading   129

 

Chapter 9: Identifying and Engaging Stakeholders        131

Selection of Stakeholders   131

Classes of Stakeholders   133

Examples   138

Proxy Stakeholders   140

Stakeholder Groups   141

Stakeholders’ Responsibilities   141

Checklist   142

Summary   142

Further Reading   143

 

Chapter 10: Identifying and Using Scenarios        145

Types of Scenarios   146

Uses for Scenarios   147

Identifying and Prioritizing Scenarios   148

Capturing Scenarios   149

What Makes a Good Scenario?   153

Applying Scenarios   154

Effective Use of Scenarios   157

Checklist   159

Summary   159

Further Reading   160

 

Chapter 11: Using Styles and Patterns         161

Introducing Design Patterns   161

Styles, Patterns, and Idioms   164

Patterns and Architectural Tactics   166

An Example of an Architectural Style   167

The Benefits of Using Architectural Styles   170

Styles and the Architectural Description   172

Applying Design Patterns and Language Idioms   172

Checklist   174

Summary   174

Further Reading   175

 

Chapter 12: Producing Architectural Models        177

Why Models Are Important   178

Types of Models   181

Modeling Languages   184

Guidelines for Creating Effective Models   187

Modeling with Agile Teams   193

Checklist   194

Summary   195

Further Reading   196

 

Chapter 13: Creating the Architectural Description         197

Properties of an Effective Architectural Description   198

Glossaries   206

The ISO Standard   206

Contents of the Architectural Description   207

Presenting the Architectural Description   213

Checklist   215

Summary   216

Further Reading   216

 

Chapter 14: Evaluating the Architecture        217

Why Evaluate the Architecture?   218

Evaluation Techniques   219

Scenario-Based Evaluation Methods   226

Evaluation during the Software Lifecycle   230

Validating the Architecture of an Existing System   233

Recording the Results of Evaluation   236

Choosing an Evaluation Approach   237

Checklist   238

Summary   238

Further Reading   239

 

Part III: A Viewpoint Catalog         241

Chapter 15: Introduction to the Viewpoint Catalog         243

 

Chapter 16: The Context Viewpoint         247

Concerns   248

Models   255

Problems and Pitfalls   261

Checklist   265

Further Reading   266

 

Chapter 17: The Functional Viewpoint          267

Concerns   268

Models   271

Problems and Pitfalls   285

Checklist   291

Further Reading   292

 

Chapter 18: The Information Viewpoint         293

Concerns   294

Models   311

Problems and Pitfalls   322

Checklist   330

Further Reading   330

 

Chapter 19: The Concurrency Viewpoint         333

Concerns   335

Models   340

Problems and Pitfalls   351

Checklist   355

Further Reading   355

 

Chapter 20: The Development Viewpoint          357

Concerns   358

Models   360

Problems and Pitfalls   367

Checklist   370

Further Reading   371

 

Chapter 21: The Deployment Viewpoint         373

Concerns   374

Models   378

Problems and Pitfalls   387

Checklist   391

Further Reading   392

 

Chapter 22: The Operational Viewpoint          393

Concerns   394

Models   402

Problems and Pitfalls   419

Checklist   423

Further Reading   424

 

Chapter 23: Achieving Consistency Across Views         425

Relationships between Views   426

Context and Functional View Consistency   427

Context and Information View Consistency   427

Context and Deployment View Consistency   428

Functional and Information View Consistency   428

Functional and Concurrency View Consistency   429

Functional and Development View Consistency   430

Functional and Deployment View Consistency   430

Functional and Operational View Consistency   431

Information and Concurrency View Consistency   431

Information and Development View Consistency   432

Information and Deployment View Consistency   432

Information and Operational View Consistency   432

Concurrency and Development View Consistency   433

Concurrency and Deployment View Consistency   433

Deployment and Operational View Consistency   434

 

Part IV: The Perspective Catalog            435

Chapter 24: Introduction to the Perspective Catalog         437

 

Chapter 25: The Security Perspective          439

Applicability to Views   441

Concerns   442

Activities: Applying the Security Perspective   446

Architectural Tactics   456

Problems and Pitfalls   465

Checklists   473

Further Reading   474


Chapter 26: The Performance and Scalability Perspective         475

Applicability to Views   476

Concerns   476

Activities: Applying the Performance and Scalability Perspective   482

Architectural Tactics   491

Problems and Pitfalls   502

Checklists   509

Further Reading   510

 

Chapter 27: The Availability and Resilience Perspective         511

Applicability to Views   512

Concerns   512

Activities: Applying the Availability and Resilience Perspective   516

Architectural Tactics   526

Problems and Pitfalls   533

Checklists   539

Further Reading   541

 

Chapter 28: The Evolution Perspective         543

Applicability to Views   544

Concerns   545

Activities: Applying the Evolution Perspective   549

Architectural Tactics   552

Problems and Pitfalls   560

Checklists   564

Further Reading   565

 

Chapter 29: Other Perspectives          567

The Accessibility Perspective   568

The Development Resource Perspective   573

The Internationalization Perspective   579

The Location Perspective   585

The Regulation Perspective   591

The Usability Perspective   595

 

Part V: Putting It All Together         603

Chapter 30: Working As A Software Architect          605

Architecture in the Project Lifecycle   605

Supporting Different Types of Projects   615

 

Appendix: Other Viewpoint Sets         621

Kruchten “4+1”   621

RM-ODP   623

Siemens (Hofmeister, Nord, and Soni)   623

SEI “Views and Beyond” Views   624

Garland and Anthony   626

IAF   627

Enterprise Architecture Frameworks   627

Other Enterprise Architecture Frameworks   629

 

Bibliography          631

About the Authors           643

 

Index            645

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