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Ninth International Workshop on Program Comprehension (IWPC'01)
An Architectural Connectivity Metric and Its Support for Incremental Re-Architecting of Large Legacy Systems
Toronto, Canada
May 12-May 13
ISBN: 0-7695-1131-7
Reinder J. Bril, Philips Research Laboratories Eindhoven
André Postma, Philips Research Laboratories Eindhoven
Abstract: Architectural connectivity metrics are a means of supporting incremental re-architecting of large legacy systems. These metrics provide support by giving an indication of the degree of connectivity between or within architectural entities in the system. Ideally, a connectivity metric should provide useful information in as many situations as possible. However, the existing metrics cohesion and coupling provide support only in a limited number of situations. In this paper, we present a new architectural connectivity metric, referred to as directed connectivity, together with an appropriate visualization. Directed connectivity is a measure for the relative number of connections from one architectural entity to another. The metric is applicable in a large number of situations, including ones where cohesion and coupling fall short. The metric is visualized by means of a tabular representation with browsing facilities. A description is given of initial experiences with directed connectivity and its visualization on a large industrial system.
Index Terms:
Software architecture, software architecture re-engineering, re-architecting, architectural metrics, architecture visualization, architectural evolution, architecture recovery.
Citation:
Reinder J. Bril, André Postma, "An Architectural Connectivity Metric and Its Support for Incremental Re-Architecting of Large Legacy Systems," icpc, pp.0269, Ninth International Workshop on Program Comprehension (IWPC'01), 2001
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