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Practical Model-Driven Enterprise Architecture

Practical Model-Driven Enterprise Architecture

By : Bahri, Joe Williams
4.3 (7)
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Practical Model-Driven Enterprise Architecture

Practical Model-Driven Enterprise Architecture

4.3 (7)
By: Bahri, Joe Williams

Overview of this book

Most organizations face challenges in defining and achieving evolved enterprise architecture practices, which can be a very lengthy process even if implemented correctly. Developers, for example, can build better solutions only if they receive the necessary design information from architects, and decision-makers can make appropriate changes within the organization only if they know the implications of doing so. The book starts by addressing the problems faced by enterprise architecture practitioners and provides solutions based on an agile approach to enterprise architecture, using ArchiMate® 3.1 as an industry standard and Sparx EA as the modeling tool. You'll learn with the help of a fictional organization that has three business units, each expecting something different from you as the enterprise architect. You'll build the practice, satisfy the different requirements of each business unit, and share the knowledge with others so they can follow your steps. Toward the end, you'll learn how to put the diagrams and the content that you have developed into documents, presentations, and web pages that can be published and shared with any stakeholder. By the end of this book, you'll be able to build a functional enterprise architecture practice that supports every part of your organization. You'll also have developed the necessary skills to populate your enterprise architecture repository with references and artifacts.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
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1
Section 1: Enterprise Architecture with Sparx Enterprise Architect
4
Section 2: Building the Enterprise Architecture Repository
12
Section 3: Managing the Repository

Modeling technology environments

In this section, we will cover the core elements of the Technology Layer of ArchiMate® 3.1. The elements discussed in this section are identified in the following diagram:

Figure 6.1 – Technology structural elements

At the core of the Technology Layer of ArchiMate® are two new elements: the Device and System Software elements. These two elements are both technology internal active structure elements and they both inherit from the same parent element, the technology node. As per the ArchiMate® 3.1 specification, a technology node—or node, in short—"represents a computational or physical resource that hosts, manipulates, or interacts with other computational or physical resources" (https://pubs.opengroup.org/architecture/archimate3-doc/chap10.html#_Toc10045410).

In simpler words, a node is any hardware or software that is used to store, process, monitor, manage, streamline, and...

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