Abstract
Enterprise architecture software design is all about composing applications to assemble value-added solutions rather than standalone products. Yet, each product and technology may have been designed and developed separately because of software engineering practices, management control over the deliverables, or technology acquisitions. To promote efficient assembly, solutions must be architected in a similar style, adhering to fundamental design principles while leveraging capabilities available in modern environments and relevant platforms. Furthermore, business agility and cost requirements dictate the identification of common capabilities and their development as reusable components across products and solutions. The 4x6 Tiered Architecture Method presented in this paper imposes a structured design, in terms of steps to follow, structure and documentation, for the logical view of an enterprise solution. Application of the 4x6 method to the analysis of an enterprise solution yields a six-tiered architecture structure and an abstract architecture specification. This specification expresses the various components, dependencies and design patterns using a graph-based data model (or “architecture catalog”) and blueprint, the latter expressed as both a diagram and XML document. The 4x6 Method has been applied in practice; this experience indicates that this method results in higher quality architecture and requires lower effort for both constructing and reviewing the architecture and its documentation.
Chapter PDF
Similar content being viewed by others
References
Kruchten, P.: The rational unified process: An introduction, 3rd edn. Addison-Wesley Professional, Boston (2003)
Rising, L.: The benefit of patterns. IEEE Software 27(5), 15–17 (2010)
Maiden, N.: Service design: It’s all in the brand. IEEE Software 27(5), 18–19 (2010)
Hadar, E., Silberman, G.M.: Agile architecture methodology: Long term strategy interleaved with short term tactics. In: Companion to the 23rd ACM SIGPLAN Conference on Object-Oriented Programming Systems Languages and Applications, pp. 641–652. ACM, Nashville (2008)
Silverstein, D., Samuel, P., DeCarlo, N.: The innovator’s toolkit: 50+ techniques for predictable and sustainable organic growth. Wiley, Hoboken (2008)
Buschmann, F., Henney, K.: Five considerations for software architecture, Part 1. IEEE Software 27(3), 63–65 (2010a)
Buschmann, F., Henney, K.: Five considerations for software architecture, Part 2. IEEE Software 27(4), 12–14 (2010b)
Burbeck, S.: Application programming in Smalltalk-80: How to use model-view-controller (MVC) (1992), http://st-www.cs.illinois.edu/users/smarch/st-docs/mvc.html (retrieved)
Bosch, J.: Toward compositional software product lines. IEEE Software 27(3), 29–34 (2010)
Ferguson, D.F., Hadar, E.: Constructing and evaluating supply-chain systems in cloud-connected enterprise. In: Moinhos Cordeiro, J., Virvou, M., Shishkov, B. (eds.) Proceedings of the International Conference on Software and Data Technologies, ICSOFT 2010, pp. 69–76. SciTePress, Athens (2010)
Sherman, S., Hadar, I., Hadar, E., Harrison, J.: Architecture documentation for agile development. Paper Presented at SATURN 2011, San Francisco, California (May 2011)
Booch, G.: An architectural oxymoron. IEEE Software 27(5), 96 (2010)
Buschmann, F.: On architecture styles and paradigms. IEEE Software 27(5), 92–94 (2010)
Hadar, E., Perreira, M.: Web services variation façade – Domain specific reference architecture for increasing integration usability. In: IEEE International Conference on Web Services, pp. 1207–1211. IEEE Computer Society, Salt Lake City (2007)
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Editor information
Editors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
Copyright information
© 2012 Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg
About this paper
Cite this paper
Hadar, E., Hadar, I., Silberman, G.M., Harrison, J.J. (2012). The 4x6 Tiered Architecture Method: An Approach to the Design of Enterprise Solutions. In: Bajec, M., Eder, J. (eds) Advanced Information Systems Engineering Workshops. CAiSE 2012. Lecture Notes in Business Information Processing, vol 112. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-31069-0_16
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-31069-0_16
Publisher Name: Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg
Print ISBN: 978-3-642-31068-3
Online ISBN: 978-3-642-31069-0
eBook Packages: Computer ScienceComputer Science (R0)