Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6885760 Journal of Systems and Software 2014 15 Pages PDF
Abstract
During the process of software design, software architects have their reasons to choose certain software components to address particular software requirements and constraints. However, existing software architecture review techniques often rely on the design reviewers' knowledge and experience, and perhaps using some checklists, to identify design gaps and issues, without questioning the reasoning behind the decisions made by the architects. In this paper, we approach design reviews from a design reasoning perspective. We propose to use an association-based review procedure to identify design issues by first associating all the relevant design concerns, problems and solutions systematically; and then verifying if the causal relationships between these design elements are valid. Using this procedure, we discovered new design issues in all three industrial cases, despite their internal architecture reviews and one of the three systems being operational. With the newly found design issues, we derive eight general design reasoning failure scenarios.
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Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Computer Science Computer Networks and Communications
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