A Field Guide to Boxology: Preliminary Classification of Architectural Styles for Software Systems (1997)
| Venue: | COMPSAC’97 INTERNATIONAL COMPUTER SOFTWARE AND APPLICATIONS CONFERENCE |
| Citations: | 116 - 4 self |
BibTeX
@INPROCEEDINGS{Shaw97afield,
author = {Mary Shaw and Paul Clements},
title = {A Field Guide to Boxology: Preliminary Classification of Architectural Styles for Software Systems},
booktitle = {COMPSAC’97 INTERNATIONAL COMPUTER SOFTWARE AND APPLICATIONS CONFERENCE},
year = {1997},
pages = {6--13},
publisher = {}
}
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Abstract
Software architects use a number of commonly-recognized “styles” to guide their design of system structures. Each of these is appropriate for some classes of problems, but none is suitable for all problems. How, then, does a software designer choose an architecture suitable for the problem at hand? Two kinds of information are required: (1) careful discrimination among the candidate architectures and (2) design guidance on how to make appropriate choices. Here we support careful discrimination with a preliminary classification of styles. We use a two-dimensional classification strategy with control and data issues as the dominant organizing axes. We position the major styles within this space and use finer-grained discriminations to elaborate variations on the styles. This provides a framework for organizing design guidance, which we partially flesh out with rules of thumb.







