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Architectural Thinking What is Architecture? © Ingo Arnold
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Architectural Thinking - What Is Architecture?

Aug 23, 2014

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Page 1: Architectural Thinking - What Is Architecture?

Architectural ThinkingWhat is Architecture?© Ingo Arnold

Page 2: Architectural Thinking - What Is Architecture?

WHAT Dimension

WHATFundamental definitions

WHYMotivation and requirements

WHEREViews and perspectives

WHEREBYMeans and techniques

WHORoles and organisations

HOWMethodologies and processes

Page 3: Architectural Thinking - What Is Architecture?

What do we deal with by the way?

We …• Plan & Define

• Architect & establish

• Maintain & operate

… our Company’s Information System …

Page 4: Architectural Thinking - What Is Architecture?

What do we deal with by the way?

What is a Company Information System?• Flight Booking System @ Lufthansa, Germany, mid 60ies

Page 5: Architectural Thinking - What Is Architecture?

What do we deal with by the way?

A Company Information System is comprised of ...• Processes

Page 6: Architectural Thinking - What Is Architecture?

What do we deal with by the way?

A Company Information System is comprised of ...• Function points and applications

Page 7: Architectural Thinking - What Is Architecture?

What do we deal with by the way?

A Company Information System is comprised of ...• Data, Data Structures and Data Containers (Folders, Binders et al)

Page 8: Architectural Thinking - What Is Architecture?

What do we deal with by the way?

A Company Information System is comprised of ...• Some sorts of technological infrastructure and underpinnings

Page 9: Architectural Thinking - What Is Architecture?

What do we deal with by the way?

What has changed is that ...• „Things“ have taken off the ground

• ... and become ...- Virtual- Clonable- Shippable- Configurable- Investigable- Deletable

.. far beyond what was possible in the „things“ world of the mid 60ies

Page 10: Architectural Thinking - What Is Architecture?

Architecture is not new

The Solution Architect in the 60ies had to arrange processes, data, applications, tools, spaces and other means, fundamental to the given business models …

Page 11: Architectural Thinking - What Is Architecture?

Architecture is not new

… similar to what the Solution Architects have to in 2008

... just the means changed a bit in the meantime

Page 12: Architectural Thinking - What Is Architecture?

Architectural disorientationWhy bother?

Page 13: Architectural Thinking - What Is Architecture?

Architectural disorientation

What is architecture?

What are you expected to do as an architect?

How is architecture manifested?

A tube

A brush

Page 14: Architectural Thinking - What Is Architecture?

Architectural disorientation

How do you distinguish good from bad architecture?

Where and when does architecture occur?

Why is architecture to be developed – why is it useful?

Whereby is architecture developed?

Who is responsible for architecture?

How do you approach architecture?

What do you need to know as an architect?

Page 15: Architectural Thinking - What Is Architecture?

Software is complex … and IT is everchanging! • If we continued to protect our assets as we did in 16th century, …

Architectural disorientation

Page 16: Architectural Thinking - What Is Architecture?

Software is complex … and IT is everchanging! • … our landscape nowadays would look like this …

Architectural disorientation

Page 17: Architectural Thinking - What Is Architecture?

Software is complex … and IT is everchanging! • … but it does not!

Architectural disorientation

Page 18: Architectural Thinking - What Is Architecture?

Architecture evolves in its context – Barcelona …

Architectural disorientation

Page 19: Architectural Thinking - What Is Architecture?

Architecture evolves in its context – Barcelona …

Architectural disorientation

Page 20: Architectural Thinking - What Is Architecture?

All too often reality

We start with a „wish list“.

What follows is „a concept“.

A „first pilot“ is implemented.

The pilot goes life.

Changes are required.

To implement the changes we need to deviate from the original „concept“.

Page 21: Architectural Thinking - What Is Architecture?

All too often reality

Software architectecture was created:

„Big Ball of Mud“-PatternIn computer programming, Big Ball of Mud is a term for a system or computer program that has no real distinguishable architecture. It usually includes more than one of the other anti-patterns.

Page 23: Architectural Thinking - What Is Architecture?

All too often reality

Maintaining a shantytown is labor-intensive and requires a broad range of skills.

One must be able to improvise repairs with the materials on-hand, and master tasks from roof repair to ad hoc sanitation.

However, there is little of the sort of skilled specialization that one sees in a mature economy.

Page 25: Architectural Thinking - What Is Architecture?

All too often reality

All too many of our systems are, architecturally, little more than shantytowns.

Investment in tools and infrastructure is too often inadequate.

Tools are usually primitive, and infrastructure such as libraries and frameworks, is undercapitalized.

Individual portions of the system grow unchecked, and the lack of infrastructure and architecture allows problems in one part of the system to erode and pollute adjacent portions.

Page 26: Architectural Thinking - What Is Architecture?

Question 4 you

What are symptoms of bad architecture?

Page 27: Architectural Thinking - What Is Architecture?

Symptoms of immature architectures

Results of analysis phase are not adequately considered.

Holistic view of IT-System is missing.

Complexity increases and becomes unmanageble.

Planning and risk-management becomes difficult.

Reuse of expertise as well as system building blocks is difficult.

Flexibility, maintainability, interoperability become a problem.

Architecture documentation is missing or not up-to-date.

Steep learning curve for new staff entering the project.

Page 28: Architectural Thinking - What Is Architecture?

Symptoms of immature architectures

Redundancy of code and functionality.

System‘s building blocks are heavily interdependent.

Very long development and change cycles.

Page 29: Architectural Thinking - What Is Architecture?

Symptoms of immature architectures

System complexity

Arc

hite

ctur

e re

leva

nce

Page 30: Architectural Thinking - What Is Architecture?

What is architecture?

Have you ever seen or touched Architecture?

.. even here ..

Page 31: Architectural Thinking - What Is Architecture?

What is architecture?

We believe “No” ..

Design-time PerspectiveSystemPerspective(Physics)

Page 32: Architectural Thinking - What Is Architecture?

What is architecture?

Architecture is an inherent aspect of any system

But you can’t see nor can you touch it on the system level

Architecture is tangible only on the level of models and plans

Architecture is mainly about quality .. not functionality

Architecture has a mid- to long-term ROI .. you cannot avoid it

ArchitecturePerspective(Models & Plans)

Page 33: Architectural Thinking - What Is Architecture?

What is architecture?

Architecture of a computer or IT-system is not immediately tangible. Nevertheless does every IT-system have an architecture

There are many architecture definitions out there, which are typically comprised of the following aspects:• Structure

• Behaviour and collaboration of architectural building blocks

• Discipline and methodology

Architecture covers everything .. from a system‘s problem domain analysis phase up to this system‘s retirement

Architecture makes complexity manageable by focussing onto only the substantial aspects of an IT-system

System

People

Page 34: Architectural Thinking - What Is Architecture?

What is architecture?

An Architecture defines behavior

Page 35: Architectural Thinking - What Is Architecture?

What is architecture?

An Architecture Balances Stakeholder Needs• The needs of the end user are associated with intuitive and correct behavior,

performance, reliability, usability, availability, and security.

• The needs of the system administrator are associated with intuitive behavior, administration, and tools to aid monitoring.

• The needs of the marketer are associated with competitive features, time to market, positioning with other products, and cost.

• The needs of the customer are associated with cost, stability, and schedule.

• The needs of the developer are associated with clear requirements and a simple, consistent design approach.

• The needs of the project manager are associated with predictability in the tracking of the project, schedule, productive use of resources, and budget.

• The needs of the maintainer are associated with a comprehensible, consistent, and documented design approach, as well as the ease with which modifications can be made

Page 36: Architectural Thinking - What Is Architecture?

What is architecture?

An Architecture May Conform to an Architectural Style• Every well-structured software-intensive system is full of patterns. (Booch

2009)

• An architectural style defines a family of systems in terms of a pattern of structural organization. More specifically, an architectural style defines a vocabulary of components and connector types, and a set of constraints on how they can be combined. (Shaw 1996)

An Architecture is influenced by its environment

Architecture is not concerned with a system‘s fine grained structures and elements (i.e. classes, objects, algorithms) but instead with such system‘s coarse-grained components and building blocks

Page 37: Architectural Thinking - What Is Architecture?

What is architecture?

Architecture is concerned with all decisions which are difficult to be changed later on

Architecture is more than just the result of an architect‘s design-activities – architecture is a science in its own right

Architecture and Design are two sides of the same coin:• All respective activities, decision making, ways of thinking are no different at all

• Architectural Decisions just have a wide ranging impact (across the system)

• Design decisions have a rather local and isolated scope (e.g. sub-system)

Architecture aims at sustaining investments

United Nations – Sustainability“Sustainability means meeting the needs of the presence without compromising the needs of the future”

Page 38: Architectural Thinking - What Is Architecture?

What is architecture?

Architecture is concerned with Macro-Structures of a system. Well, here the question remains: „what are such macro-structures?“• For example, lock-strategies for persistence-stores …

• … or addressing schema length (e.g. 32-bit versus 64-bit) seem pretty low-level technical at a first glance

• However, if they have a significant impact on the system’s ability to evolve and scale over time they are architectural

Page 39: Architectural Thinking - What Is Architecture?

What is architecture?

Architecture contributes to the non-functional capabilities of our systems, where investments are vital & crucial but also have a diminishing ROI

Page 40: Architectural Thinking - What Is Architecture?

What is architecture?Well – and there are a few more ;-)

First we make our Systems – then our Systems make us

We make Software like we make cathedrals – first we make them and then we pray

Page 41: Architectural Thinking - What Is Architecture?

What is architecture?Well – and there are a few more ;-)

By looking at systems & system architectures the values and maximes by which an organisation lives can easily be derived

This is similar to archaeology, where the experts derive cultural & behavioural specifics by artefacts found centuries later

Page 42: Architectural Thinking - What Is Architecture?

What is architecture?Well – and there are a few more ;-)

Do we all really well understand what we do – always? • “A fool with a tool is still a fool” ( you know that)

• “A fool with a tool is an armed fool” ( even worse)

engine doesn’t run anymore

Well – maybe some fuel?!

Let’s have a deeper look into there

Page 43: Architectural Thinking - What Is Architecture?

What is architecture?Well – and there are a few more ;-)

Do we all really well understand what we do always? • “A tool with a fool is still a fool” ( you know that)

• “A tool with a fool is an armed fool” ( even worse)

Not a good idea!!!

Page 44: Architectural Thinking - What Is Architecture?

What is architecture?The spirit of architecture

What’s so cool about the SAPs of this world?

Company A Company B Company C

20 %

cu

stom

izin

g80

% C

OTS

Page 45: Architectural Thinking - What Is Architecture?

What is architecture?The spirit of architecture

Frameworks are applied architecture• Hollywood principle ( „don‘t call us – we call you“)• Architecture constraints – it controls potential developer-freedom based on a

system‘s fundamental structures (e.g. backbone process logic).

Page 46: Architectural Thinking - What Is Architecture?

What is architecture?The spirit of architecture

Frameworks are applied architecture• Architecture guides.

• Architecture reduces complexity by offering dedicated extension points.

• Architecture frees up developers from architectural decision making (i.e. Backbone process logic).

Page 47: Architectural Thinking - What Is Architecture?

What is architecture?The spirit of architecture

Frameworks are applied architecture• The SAP system is an HR generic process expert.

• <Company> is an expert in their specific HR process requirements.

• The overall architecture balances these forces and allows for both, controlled evolution and governance, as well as flexibility.

Example

Page 48: Architectural Thinking - What Is Architecture?

Architecture – Definition

“The software architecture of a program or computing system is the structure or structures of the system, which comprise software components, the externally visible properties of those components, and the relationships among them” [Bass et al]

Page 49: Architectural Thinking - What Is Architecture?

Architecture – Definition

Architecture is concerned with ...• the structure and structure(s) of a system ..

• its individual building blocks or components ..

• their externally visible properties ..

• as well as their relationships amongst these.

Page 50: Architectural Thinking - What Is Architecture?

Architecture – Definition

Architecture is concerned with the main pillars of a computer-system – not with this system‘s details ..

Page 51: Architectural Thinking - What Is Architecture?

Architecture – Definition

.. but what the main pillars are, depends on viewpoint and perspective!

Solution context A Solution context B

Page 52: Architectural Thinking - What Is Architecture?

Architecture – Definition

.. but what the main pillars are, depends on viewpoint and perspective!

Page 53: Architectural Thinking - What Is Architecture?

Architecture – Definition

Architecture contributes to the non-functional capabilities ( qualities) of a system as well as to its longevity• Extensibility (Quickly add PDF as a new UI channel)

• Adaptability and changebility (Add the role Supervisor to our system)

• Reusability (Reuse the Shopping Cart we developed for our portal)

• Managability (Grant the aquired company’s employees access to S)

• Security (Encrypt all data that goes into this database)

• Availability (Make sure the service is always up and running)

• Scalability (A marketing campaign is going to increase load on Site S)

• Performance (S is only used if search-result response time is below x)

Page 54: Architectural Thinking - What Is Architecture?

Architecture – Definition

Architecture shows the holistic whole only if all appropriate views are combined.

Function / Process View

Stakeholder View

Component View

Operational View

Deployment View

Hostand

operate

Package and

deploy

ImplementFunction

ServeFunction1 Function2 Function3

Page 55: Architectural Thinking - What Is Architecture?

Architecture – Definition

Architecture shows the holistic whole only if all appropriate views are combined .. but this should be done in order ..

Page 56: Architectural Thinking - What Is Architecture?

Architecture – Definition

Architecture shows the holistic whole only if all appropriate views are combined .. as shown here (Aarau Photo)

Page 57: Architectural Thinking - What Is Architecture?

Architecture – Definition

Architecture shows the holistic whole only if all appropriate views are combined .. as shown here (Aarau Model)

Page 58: Architectural Thinking - What Is Architecture?

Architecture – Definition

Architecture shows the holistic whole only if all appropriate views are combined .. as shown here (Public Transport)

Page 59: Architectural Thinking - What Is Architecture?

Architecture – Definition

Architecture shows the holistic whole only if all appropriate views are combined .. as shown here (Denisity of Populat.)

Page 60: Architectural Thinking - What Is Architecture?

Architecture – Definition

Architecture shows the holistic whole only if all appropriate views are combined .. as shown here (Buffer Zones)

Page 61: Architectural Thinking - What Is Architecture?

Architecture – Definition

Architecture shows the holistic whole only if all appropriate views are combined .. Zoom-Level is similarily important ..

Page 62: Architectural Thinking - What Is Architecture?

Architecture – Definition

Architecture shows the holistic whole only if all appropriate views are combined .. as filters ..

Page 63: Architectural Thinking - What Is Architecture?

Architecture – Definition

Architecture needs to be managed• One System

• Many Systems

Page 64: Architectural Thinking - What Is Architecture?

Architecture – Definition

Architecture needs to be managed over time• Yesterday ..

• Tomorrow

Page 65: Architectural Thinking - What Is Architecture?

Architecture – Definition

IT-Systems become increasingly more complex, which naturally leads to more specialised architectural domains and disciplines:• Enterprise-Architecture.

• Software-Architecture.

• Data-Architecture.

• Integration-Architecture.

• Network-Architecture.

• Security-Architecture.

• System-Management-Architecture.

• Etc.

One singular IT-System requires its overall architecture to take into consideration most – if not all – of the above listed areas and disciplines.

Page 66: Architectural Thinking - What Is Architecture?

Architect

The Architect • is a Technical Leader

• role may be fulfilled by a team

• understands the system development process

• has knowledge of his business or technology domain

• has technology knowledge

• has design skills

• has programming skills

• is a good communicator

• makes decisions by balancing tradoffs

• is aware of organisations’ politics

• is a negotiator

Page 67: Architectural Thinking - What Is Architecture?

Architecting

Architecting • is an art

• spans multiple disciplines

• is an ongoing activity

• is driven by many stakeholders

• often involves making tradeoffs

• acknowledges experience

• is both top-down and bottom-up

Page 68: Architectural Thinking - What Is Architecture?

ArchitectingThe benefits of Architecting

The benefits of Architecting • it addresses system qualities

• it drives consensus

• it supports the planning process

• it drives architectural integrity

• it helps manage complexity

• it provides a basis for reuse

• it reduces maintenance costs

• it supports impact analysis