Carnegie Mellon University
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Evolution styles: foundations and models for software architecture evolution

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journal contribution
posted on 2012-02-01, 00:00 authored by Jeffrey M. Barnes, David Garlan, Bradley Schmerl

As new market opportunities, technologies, platforms, and frameworks become available, systems require large-scale and systematic architectural restructuring to accommodate them. Today’s architects have few techniques to help them plan this architecture evolution. In particular, they have little assistance in planning alternative evolution paths, trading off various aspects of the different paths, or knowing best practices for particular domains. In this paper, we describe an approach for planning and reasoning about architecture evolution. Our approach focuses on providing architects with the means to model prospective evolution paths and supporting analysis to select among these candidate paths. To demonstrate the usefulness of our approach, we show how it can be applied to an actual architecture evolution. In addition, we present some theoretical results about our evolution path constraint specification language.

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Publisher Statement

The final publication is available at Springer via http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10270-012-0301-9

Date

2012-02-01

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