Abstract

As software systems become increasingly complex, the need to investigate and evaluate them at high levels of abstraction becomes more important. When systems are very complex, evaluating the system from an architectural level is necessary in order to understand the structure and interrelationships among the components of the system. There are several existing approaches available for software architecture evaluation. Some of these techniques, pre-implementation software architectural evaluations, are performed before the system is implemented. Others, implementation-oriented software architectural evaluations, are performed after a version of the system has been implemented. This chapter briefly describes the concepts of software architecture and software architectural evaluations, describes a new process for software architectural evaluation, provides results from two case studies where this process was applied, and presents areas for future work.

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