Home   Research Publications Members Related Software
IndexBrowse   BibliographiesMy selection
 Search: in   (word length ≥ 3)
      Login
Publication no #195   Download bibtex file Type :   Html | Bib | Both
Add to my selection
What is Style?

David Garlan.


In Proceedings of the Dagstuhl Workshop on Software Architecture, Saarbruecken, Germany, February 1995.

Online links: PDF PS   Bibtex entry   Plain Text

Abstract
A central aspect of architectural design is the use of recurring organizational patterns and idioms- or architectural styles. Examples include generic system organizations such as those based on dataflow or layers, as well as specific organizational structures such as the classical decomposition of a compiler, the OSI communication stack, and the MVC user interface paradigm. The principled use of architectural styles has a number of practical benefits. First, it promotes design reuse: routine solutions with well-understood properties can be reapplied to new problems with confidence. Second, it can lead to significant code reuse: often the invariant aspects of an architectural style lend themselves to shared implementations. Third, it is easier for others to understand a system's organization if conventionalized structures are used. For example, even without giving details, characterization of a system as a 'client-server' organization immediately conveys a strong image of the kinds of pieces and how they fit together. Fourth,use of standardized styles supports interoperability. Examples include CORBA object-oriented architecture, and event-based tool integration. Fifth, by constraining the design space, an architectural style often permits specialized,style-specific analyses. For example, it is possible to analyze pipe-filter systems for schedulability, throughput, latency, and deadlock-freedom. Such analyses might not be meaningful for an arbitrary, ad hoc architecture - or even one constructed in a different style. Sixth, it is usually possible to provide style-specific visualizations: this makes it possible to provide graphical and textual renderings that match engineers' domain-specific intuitions about how their designs should be depicted.

Keywords: Architectural Style, Software Architecture.  
    Created: 2006-08-22 17:16:23     Modified: 2006-08-22 17:17:45
Feedback: ABLE Webmaster
Last modified: Sat October 12 2019 16:15:32
        BibAdmin