Agile Architecting Collection
• Collection
Publisher
Software Engineering Institute
Subjects
Abstract
Today’s software users have come to expect new features as soon as the need for them arises. In response to this challenge, we are working to reduce the footprint of traditional software offerings and move to providing continuous delivery of new or improved capabilities. Agile practices are strengthened through application of architecture principles. Informed anticipation with just enough architecting in the context of agile release planning can provide the tools to balance of agility, innovation, and speed on the one hand, and system governance, flexibility, and planning for future needs on the other.
Agile software development methods focus on delivering observable benefits to the end user, early and often, through working software. In the Agile approach, functional user stories illustrate that particular capabilities are required. Typically these collected stories are prioritized by end-user need, but almost every story has dependencies on other stories. To optimize value to the user, teams must look ahead and anticipate future needs.
Stories also have dependencies upon the architectural elements of the system. We have defined architectural agility as the ability to identify and analyze these dependencies, and incorporate dependency awareness into a responsive development model. These additional considerations add a new dimension to the typical Agile release planning; benefits derived from the execution of architectural activities may now be allocated to either the current release or to future releases. Architectural agility offers tools that enable the software community to
- adapt the agile focus on end-user stories to address the broader topic of capabilities, including quality attribute requirements
- facilitate a “just-in-time” approach to building out the architectural infrastructure
- optimize architectural investment decisions by analyzing uncertainty and tradeoffs between incurred cost and anticipated value
Architectural agility allows architectural development to follow a “just-in-time” model. There is no completion of exhaustive requirements and design activities and reviews to delay delivery of features. At the same time, architectural agility maintains a steady and consistent focus on continuing architectural evolution in support of emerging features.
Architectural agility requires just enough anticipation. To achieve this quality, architectural anticipation must be informed, and certain tools can help achieve this: dependency analysis, real options analysis, and technical debt management.
Developers first select capabilities to create within each iteration, then identify the architectural elements that must be implemented to support them. The term capabilities replaces user stories, reflecting a need to consider non-functional requirements such as modifiability and security, and to incorporate requirements across a broad range of stakeholders. Such dependency analysis enables the development team to prioritize and schedule work within a release.
A natural extension of a “just-in-time” model of architectural agility and agile architecting is the ability of the architecture and agile processes to enable effective release management and deployment. This requires design and analysis techniques and tools to support not only development practices but also reliable, robust, and secure deployment. For example, a subset of design patterns and tactics improves effectiveness of deployment-related practices such as continuous integration, automated testing, and continuous delivery.
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Collection Items

Beyond Scrum + XP: Agile Architecture Practice
• Article
By Ipek Ozkaya, Robert Nord, Stephany Bellomo, Heidi Brayer
This article highlights several approaches to agile architecture that organizations have applied and provides an in-depth release planning and roadmap planning.
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Working Together: The Team Software Process and Architecture-Centric Engineering
• Brochure
By Software Engineering Institute
The SEI combined elements of its architecture-centric engineering (ACE) method with its Team Software Process (TSP) to help Bursatec develop a new trading engine.
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Evolutionary Improvements of Cross-Cutting Concerns: Performance in Practice
• Conference Paper
By Stephany Bellomo, Neil Ernst, Robert Nord, Ipek Ozkaya
This paper describes two key challenges of incrementally evolving cross-cutting concerns such as performance during incremental software development.
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Toward Design Decisions to Enable Deployability: Empirical Study of Three Projects Reaching for the Continuous Delivery Holy Grail
• Conference Paper
By Stephany Bellomo, Neil Ernst, Robert Nord, Rick Kazman
This paper summarizes three project teams' deployability goals and the architectural decisions they made to enable deployability while practicing continuous delivery.
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Elaboration on an Integrated Architecture and Requirement Practice
• Conference Paper
By Stephany Bellomo, Robert Nord, Ipek Ozkaya
This paper elaborates the practice of prototyping with quality attribute focus to gain a better understanding of how this practice works and what the benefits of the approach are.
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A Study of Enabling Factors for Rapid Fielding
• Conference Paper
By Stephany Bellomo, Robert Nord, Ipek Ozkaya
This paper summarizes the practices that practitioners interviewed from Agile projects found most valuable and provides an overarching scenario for insight into how and why these practices emerge.
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Variations on Using Propagation Costs to Measure Architecture Modifiability Properties
• Conference Paper
By Robert Nord, Ipek Ozkaya, Raghvinder Sangwan, Julien Delange, Marco Gonzalez-Rojas (University of British Columbia), Philippe Kruchten
Demonstrates how enhancing the propagation metric based on architectural metrics results in enhancements detection of modifiability properties not detectable by the propagation cost metric.
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Making Architecture Visible to Improve Flow Management in Lean Software Development
• Article
By Robert Nord, Ipek Ozkaya, Raghvinder Sangwan
This article explains how the flow management concept from lean software development can provide a framework for balancing the allocation of critical architectural tasks to development effort.
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Agile in Distress: Architecture to the Rescue
• Conference Paper
By Robert Nord, Ipek Ozkaya, Philippe Kruchten
For large-scale software-development endeavors, agility is enabled by architecture, and vice versa, and architecture supports high-priority business features.
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Understanding the Role of Constraints on Architecturally Significant Requirements
• Conference Paper
By Neil Ernst, Ipek Ozkaya, Robert Nord, Julien Delange, Stephany Bellomo, Ian Gorton
This paper describes a case study conducted to identify architecturally significant requirements that were impacted by tool selection.
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