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A Comparison of Static Architecture Compliance Checking Approaches
Mumbai, India January 06-January 09
DOI Bookmark: http://doi.ieeecomputersociety.org/10.1109/WICSA.2007.1Sixth Working IEEE/IFIP Conference on ...
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Jens Knodel, Fraunhofer Institute for Experimental Software Engineering (IESE), Germany
Daniel Popescu, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, USA
The software architecture is one of the most important artifacts created in the lifecycle of a software system. It enables, facilitates, hampers, or interferes directly the achievement of business goals, functional and quality requirements. One instrument to determine how adequate the architecture is for its intended usage is architecture compliance checking. This paper compares three static architecture compliance checking approaches (reflexion models, relation conformance rules, and component access rules) by assessing their applicability in 13 distinct dimensions. The results give guidance on when to use which approach.
Index Terms:
access rules, architecture compliance checking, architecture evaluation, conformance rules, SAVE, software architecture, static analysis.
Citation:
Jens Knodel, Daniel Popescu, "A Comparison of Static Architecture Compliance Checking Approaches," wicsa, pp.12, Sixth Working IEEE/IFIP Conference on Software Architecture (WICSA'07), 2007
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