Software Reuse: Architecture, Process and Organization for Business Success

Author:   Ivar Jacobson ,  M. Griss ,  P. Jonsson ,  Patrik Jonsson
Publisher:   Pearson Education Limited
ISBN:  

9780201924763


Pages:   528
Publication Date:   26 June 1997
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained


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Software Reuse: Architecture, Process and Organization for Business Success


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Overview

This text provides a set of guidelines for ensuring success with systematic, large-scale object oriented reuse, examining component-based software engineering, the use of standard components in systematic design procedures which allow components to be used in different ways in different systems. The book develops a conceptual framework and specific techniques to address key business, process, architecture and organization issues in a reuse-driven software engineering business. It uses a Business Process Re-engineering (BPR) approach and provides advice on setting up and running a reuse business.

Full Product Details

Author:   Ivar Jacobson ,  M. Griss ,  P. Jonsson ,  Patrik Jonsson
Publisher:   Pearson Education Limited
Imprint:   Addison Wesley
Dimensions:   Width: 18.00cm , Height: 2.20cm , Length: 24.30cm
Weight:   0.890kg
ISBN:  

9780201924763


ISBN 10:   0201924765
Pages:   528
Publication Date:   26 June 1997
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Out of Print
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained

Table of Contents

Preface Systematic software reuse What is this book about? Who needs a Reuse-Driven Software Engineering Business? The essence of the Reuse-Driven Software Engineering Business Our experience How this book is organized What this book offers Acknowledgments Dedications PART I - INTRODUCING THE REUSE-DRIVEN SOFTWARE ENGINEERING BUSINESS 1. Software Reuse Success Factors 1.1 Software reuse is a simple idea 1.2 Components are fueling a revolution in application development 1.3 A systematic approach makes pragmatic reuse work 1.4 Ericsson and Hewlett-Packard reuse experience reveals common principles 1.5 Reuse requires changes in process 1.6 Reuse requires changes in organization 1.7 Adopt reuse systematically and incrementally 1.8 Input from other reuse programs 1.9 It takes a set of principles 1.10 Summary 2. Reuse-Driven Software Engineering Is A Business 2.1 Is it a business for you? 2.2 Make reuse cost-effective 2.3 A Reuse Business has business characteristics 2.3 Architect components and applications 2.4 Software engineering processes 2.5 Establishing and managing a reuse business 2.6 Summary PART II - ARCHITECTURAL STYLE 3. Object-Oriented Software Engineering 3.1 Software engineering transforms requirements into code 3.2 Software engineering is a team process 3.3 Software engineering is systematic model building 3.4 Objects unify the modeling process 3.5 The use case model captures system requirements 3.6 The analysis model shapes system architecture 3.7 The design model defines the implementation 3.8 The implementation model is the code 3.9 The test model validates the system 3.10 Summary 4. Application And Component Systems 4.1 Application developers can reuse OOSE model components 4.2 Application families allow significant reuse 4.3 Application systems are built from reusable components 4.4 Group components into component systems 4.5 Facades control access to component system internals 4.6 Facades and component systems are special kinds of packages 4.7 Component systems export components via facades 4.8 Specialize some components before reuse 4.9 Variability occurs at variation points 4.10 Use several kinds of variability mechanisms 4.11 Reuse variable components to build application systems 4.12 Package and document component systems for reuse 4.13 Summary 5. Use Case Components 5.1 Structure the use case model to ensure component reuse 5.2 The use case model shapes the rest of the system 5.3 Reusing components to build the use case model 5.4 Design the use case components for effective reuse 5.5 Not all use cases should be reusable components 5.6 Reusing concrete or abstract actor and use case components 5.7 Expressing use case variability 5.8 Packaging and documenting use case components 5.9 Summary 6. Object Components 6.1 Object models define system architecture and design 6.2 Reusing analysis and design components 6.3 Expressing variability in object model components 6.4 Tracing use case variability to the object models 6.5 Reusable analysis components 6.6 Subsystem components group related classes 6.7 Reusable design and implementation components 6.8 Packaging and documenting object components and variants 6.9 Summary 7. Layered Architecture 7.1 Architecture defines system structure, interfaces and interaction patterns 7.2 A good architecture is crucial to maintain system integrity 7.3 A layered architecture organizes software according to generality 7.4 A layered architecture reduces software dependencies 7.5 The middleware layer supports distributed object computing 7.6 The business-specific layer supports rap

Reviews

There is still a lot of controversy about whether object-oriented software reuse really pays off. This book provides not only many successful examples from Griss' work at Hewlett-Packard, Jacobson's work at Ericsson, and elsewhere, but also an experience-based approach for repeating the successes. The approach involves not just a class-library silver bullet, but an integrated strategy involving business-case analysis, domain engineering, product line architecting, people and process management, and life-cycle software asset management. A particularly nice feature of the book is a reuse-oriented tailoring of the Jacobson-Booch-Rumbaugh Unified Modeling Language. Barry Boehm, TRW Prof of Software Engineering, Director of Center for Software Engineering University of Southern California. This book tells it as it is: reuse is a business as well as a technical decision that requires engineering discipline and management support. If you are serious about improving your software development productivity and reducing your time to market by making OO work for you, then read this book. You won't be disappointed! Will Tracz, Senior Programmer in Advanced Technology, Lockheed Martin Federal Systems. This book is comprehensive in its coverage of the fundamentals of software reuse, the subject that is catalysing the transformation of our industry from a craft to an engineering discipline. I commend Jacobson, Griss and Jonsson for their important contribution to the field. Paul Bassett, Senior Vice President Research, Netron Inc. This is the best book on software reuse I've ever seen. It should be on the desk of every project manager who wants to improve productivity, quality and timeliness in software development. David Taylor, President, Enterprise Engines Inc.


There is still a lot of controversy about whether object-oriented software reuse really pays off. This book provides not only many successful examples from Griss' work at Hewlett-Packard, Jacobson's work at Ericsson, and elsewhere, but also an experience-based approach for repeating the successes. The approach involves not just a class-library silver bullet, but an integrated strategy involving business-case analysis, domain engineering, product line architecting, people and process management, and life-cycle software asset management. A particularly nice feature of the book is a reuse-oriented tailoring of the Jacobson-Booch-Rumbaugh Unified Modeling Language. Barry Boehm, TRW Prof of Software Engineering, Director of Center for Software Engineering University of Southern California. This book tells it as it is: reuse is a business as well as a technical decision that requires engineering discipline and management support. If you are serious about improving your software development productivity and reducing your time to market by making OO work for you, then read this book. You won't be disappointed! Will Tracz, Senior Programmer in Advanced Technology, Lockheed Martin Federal Systems. This book is comprehensive in its coverage of the fundamentals of software reuse, the subject that is catalysing the transformation of our industry from a craft to an engineering discipline. I commend Jacobson, Griss and Jonsson for their important contribution to the field. Paul Bassett, Senior Vice President Research, Netron Inc. This is the best book on software reuse I've ever seen. It should be on the desk of every project manager who wants to improve productivity, quality and timeliness in software development. David Taylor, President, Enterprise Engines Inc.


Author Information

"Dr. Ivar Jacobson, Vice President of Business Engineering, is the inventor of the OOSE method, and he is also the founder of Objectory AB in Sweden, which recently merged with Rational Software Corporation. Dr. Jacobson is the principal author of two influential and best-selling books Object-Oriented Software Engineering--A Use Case Driven Approach (Computer Language Productivity award winner in 1992) and The Object Advantage--Business Process Reengineering with Object Technology. He has also authored several widely referenced papers on object technology. One of the most famous papers is his first OOPSLA '87 paper entitled ""Object-Oriented Development in an Industrial Environment,"" which presented the first truly object-oriented method ever published. Ivar Jacobson's use-case driven approachhas had a very strong impact on the entireOOAD industry, and he himself has become one of its ""icons."" Consequently, he isa frequently invited keynote speaker and panelist, debating OOAD topics withcolleagues and methodologists such as Grady Booch, Jim Rumbaugh, StevenMellor, and Rebecca Wirfs-Brock at major OO conferences around the world. He is well known for his pioneering work and more than 20 years of experience inusing object methods for the design of large real-time systems. His earlyobject-based design technique has evolved into the international standardITU(formerly CCITT)/SDL. Dr. Jacobson also regularly serves on the OOPSLA, ECOOP, and TOOLSprogram committees, and he is a member of the advisory board of the Journal ofObject-Oriented Programming. In 1994, Ivar Jacobson received the first Swedish Computer Association (SCA)award (the Kjell Hultman prize) for ""extraordinary achievement in promotingefficiency and productivity in the development and use of informationtechnology."" Martin Griss is a Senior Laboratory Scientist at Hewlett Packard Laboratories where, as HP's ""Reuse Rabbi"", he created the Corporate Reuse Program and led HP's technical contributions as co-submittor of UML to the OMG. He also writes a reuse column for Object Magazine and is active on several reuse program and steering commitees. Patrik Jonsson works at Rational Software Corporation in Sweden as a Senior Consultant where he has been developing the architecture and method of the Objectory process with a current focus on reuse and user interface development. 0201924765AB04062001"

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