Moving Towards Industrial Software Ecosystems: Are Our Software Architectures Fit for the Future?

Schultis KB, Elsner C, Lohmann D (2013)


Publication Type: Conference contribution

Publication year: 2013

Publisher: to appear

Edited Volumes: 2013 4th International Workshop on Product LinE Approaches in Software Engineering, PLEASE 2013 - Proceedings

City/Town: to appear

Pages Range: 9-12

Conference Proceedings Title: Proceedings of the 4th International Workshop on Product LinE Approaches in Software Engineering (PLEASE 2013)

Event location: San Francisco, CA, USA

URI: http://www4.informatik.uni-erlangen.de/Publications/2013/schultis_13_please.pdf

DOI: 10.1109/PLEASE.2013.6608655

Abstract

The development of large-scale software productlines within large enterprises commonly involves various internal business units. Although within the same enterprise, each business unit has individual motivations and participation interests. For coordinating development, the emerging discipline of software ecosystems intents to explicitly discover and analyze the different players' interests, and manage them, often by means of a suitable software architecture. Already within a single enterprise, this discipline can be of high value. Instead of detailed managerial orders to coordinate internal interactions, an analysis of the players, their interests, and a suitable software architecture may slacken organizational structures and simplify processes. We have started to analyze the ecosystems of several Siemens internal product-lines in order to determine the different players and their interests, and to derive suitable software architectural requirements from this setting. This will enable us to compare these requirements to the actual architecture, for identifying reusable pain points and best practices of the existing system. However, there is no systematic (A) approach to model and analyze the collaboration among the participants from a technical perspective, as well as (B) to derive reusable architectural design-patterns and anti-patterns from such software ecosystems. By illustrating these problems using an existing software productline that moves towards a software ecosystem, we are looking for answers to the two questions above to evaluate whether our product-lines are fit for a future as internal software ecosystems. © 2013 IEEE.

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How to cite

APA:

Schultis, K.-B., Elsner, C., & Lohmann, D. (2013). Moving Towards Industrial Software Ecosystems: Are Our Software Architectures Fit for the Future? In Proceedings of the 4th International Workshop on Product LinE Approaches in Software Engineering (PLEASE 2013) (pp. 9-12). San Francisco, CA, USA: to appear: to appear.

MLA:

Schultis, Klaus-Benedikt, Christoph Elsner, and Daniel Lohmann. "Moving Towards Industrial Software Ecosystems: Are Our Software Architectures Fit for the Future?" Proceedings of the 4th International Workshop on Product LinE Approaches in Software Engineering (PLEASE 2013), San Francisco, CA, USA to appear: to appear, 2013. 9-12.

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