Download - 10 Hinweise für Architekten
Eberhard Wolff, adesso AG
Zehn Hinweise für Architekten
About me
• Eberhard Wolff • Architecture & Technology Manager at adesso • adesso is a leading IT consultancy in Germany • Speaker • Author (e.g. first German Spring book) • Blog: http://ewolff.com • Twitter: @ewolff • http://slideshare.com/ewolff • [email protected]
Why?
• Educating architects internally at adesso
• What should they know?
• What is the bare minimum?
Software Architect Software architect is a general term with many accepted definitions which refers to a broad range of roles.
Not really well defined…
Software Architecture The software architecture of a system is the set of
structures needed to reason about it, which comprise
software elements, relations among them, and
properties of both.
Why We Care
Software Architecture
Structures Software elements Relations Properties
Performance
Availability
Productivity
Maintainability
Security
Operations
Defines non-functional requirements &
quality
Software Architect: Responsibilities
• Manager • Responsibility: non-functional
requirements / quality • Tool: Define and enforce
architecture
• Functional requirements covered by requirements process
• Functional requirements influence the architecture
YOU ARE NOT AN ARCHITECT!
Agile Development i.e. Scrum
Product Owner
Creates stories
Stories
Scrum Master Removes obstacles
Enforces rules
Team Self-organizing
Implements stories
Where is the
Architect?
You Are Not An Architect!
• No manager • Need to convince not manage • Therefore: Not that different from a developer • More experienced • More knowledge
Is “Architect” a Good Metaphor? • Buildings are physical entities
– Hard to change
• Construction industry is established • …and has a long history
• Buildings can be fully specified • Software can’t (see Agility)
• Clear separation: Architect vs. construction worker
• Common for a Software Architect to be a former developer
• …or even doing some coding
Different Way to Think About Roles
1999 2001
Software Craftsmanship Manifesto (2009)
• As aspiring Software Craftsmen we are raising the bar of professional software development by practicing it and helping others learn the craft. Through this work we have come to value:
• Not only working software, – but also well-crafted software
• Not only responding to change, – but also steadily adding value
• Not only individuals and interactions, – but also a community of professionals
• Not only customer collaboration, – but also productive partnerships
Architect as a Master Craftsman • More experienced • Knows the tools very
well • Guides and helps others • Incorporates feedback • Improves the craft • Quality
• Will work on code • But knows the bigger
picture of the project • Education and work on
the project at hand
YOUR OPINION MATTERS!
Your Opinion Matters!
• You need to have your own opinion • …about technologies • …about architecture approaches
• Listen to opinions of others • …but come up with your own • Your responsibility
• http://lemmings.mytrash.tv/
Your Opinion Matters!
• This applies to this conference • …and this talk • If it does not make sense to you
– say so • Your opinion – your responsibility • Even if someone is a speaker – he might still
be wrong • Never be intimidated!
PEOPLE WANT TO IMPROVE!
People Want to Improve!
• Technical people take pride in their skills
• …often also quality
• They want to improve and create great quality!
• Guide the way • Define what quality is
What You Can Do…
• Education • Review • Pairing • Talks • …
What If They Don’t Want to Improve?
• You are screwed • No way to create high quality with
those people
• Ensure that they know what quality is and what is expected
ARCHITECTURE = TRADE OFF
Architecture = Trade Off
• There are numerous ways to architect each system
• There is no one single right architecture
• Each architecture has strength and weaknesses
• Think about architecture in terms of Trade Offs
• Do they match your requirements?
Example for Trade Off: Persistence
• Option: SQL – More control – Less infrastructure
• Option: O/R mapper – Seemingly easier to use – But a complex piece of technology
• Option: NoSQL – A lot of options with individual strength and
weaknesses
IMPROVE YOUR VOCABULARY
Vocabulary • Approaches to architecting a
system • Defines what kind of architectures
and systems you can express
• The more you know the better you can do trade offs
• Will offer new perspectives on what you doing
• Also it is interesting to learn what others do
How to Improve Your Vocabulary
• Patterns – Fowler: Patterns of Enterprise
Application Architecture – Gamma et al: Design Patterns – Buschmann et al: Patterns-
Oriented Software Architecture – Hohpe: Pattern of Enterprise
Integration • Evans: Domain Driven Design
How to Improve Your Vocabulary • Technologies
– How many Persistence approaches do you know?
– Should at least have a high level overview
– There is life beyond standards – Can save a lot of time and effort
• Conferences • Web Sites • Reviews • Coaching
Again: Persistence
• “Patterns of Enterprise Application Architecture” lists persistence approaches
• Ruby on Rails uses Active Record (i.e. objects can store themselves)
• myBATIS for easy persistence using SQL (Java / .NET)
• …
EAT YOUR OWN DOG FOOD!
Eat Your Own Dog Food! • Defining an architecture is easy • It is hard to create the right
architecture
• Need feedback
• Eat your own dog food: Develop code yourself
• Do pair programming • To become grounded
NO BROKEN WINDOWS
Broken Windows Theory • Once windows are not
repaired… • …vandals will break more • …break into the building • …
• Accepting compromises on quality is risky
• …but if you strive for ultimate quality everywhere, you will fail
• In particular with legacy software
Broken Windows in Architecture • Compromises on quality will
become out of hand • Might speed up a project for
a limited time • But: Will hurt productivity in
the long run • …and ultimately slow it down • Higher quality can mean less
cost and quicker delivery • Metaphor: Technical debt • Much like debt in real life
But…
• There might still be broken windows • There might be more and less skilled
developers
• What do I do?
STRATEGIC DESIGN
Domain Driven Design • “Tackling Complexity
in the Heart of Software”
• E.g. Ubiquitous Language for Code, Developers and Customers
Strategic Domain Driven Design • Bounded Context:
Model used only in a specific part of the system
• Context Map: Translate models from different parts of the system
• Anti-Corruption Layer: Make sure the core domain is not corrupted
Strategic Domain Driven Design
• Can be used to manage quality
• What are the core business domains?
• Focus on quality of those • Isolate them from the rest of
the system • Let the best developer work
on the most important parts
Strategic Domain Driven Design
• Acknowledges that not all developers are equals
• …and not all parts of a system will have the same quality
• Allows you to steer which parts will be better
CARE ABOUT ARCHITECTURE AND CODE
Care About Architecture and Code
• You can draw diagrams until the end of time • It’s the code and the architecture in the code
that matters • Architectures is only used to influence code
MEASURE AND REDUCE
Measure and Reduce
• No way to know all code by heart • Still: You and the team need to understand
the state of the project • Need tools to measure and reduce
information
Sonar
• Server that integrates a lot of systems • Static code analysis (Findbugs, PMD etc) • Lines of Code, classes • Test code coverage • Complexity • Historized i.e. easy to spot trends • Easy to install • Visit http://nemo.sonarsource.org/ for
examples
Draw Conclusions!
• Do not try to enforce a certain value for a metric!
• Metrics are used to reduce information and get warning signs
• Use them to improve quality • If you enforce a value mindlessly problems
will be avoided – not solved • …and measurements will become worthless
DEPENDENCIES MATTER!
Dependency Management
• Essential for measuring architecture • i.e. what is the structure in the code?
• Why are Dependencies so important?
What is Architecture?
• Architecture is the decomposition of systems in parts
• No large or complex parts • No cyclic dependencies
Normal Dependencies • A and B might be
packages or classes
• B depends on A, i.e. it uses classes, methods etc.
• Changes in A impact B • Changes in B do not
impact A
Component A
Component B
Cyclic Dependency • B depends on A and A on
B • Changes in A impact B • Changes in B impact A • A and B can only be
changed as one unit • …even though they should
be two separate units
Component A
Component B
Bigger cyclic dependencies
Component A
Component C
Component B
Measure Dependencies!
• …otherwise they will get out of hand • Cyclic dependencies mean:
– It should be separated according to the architecture
– …but it is not
• JDepend – rather outdated • Structure 101 • Sonargraph
Care about Code and
Architecture
Measure and Reduce
Dependencies Matter
You are Not an Architect
Eat your own Dog Food
People Want To Improve
Architecture is Trade Off
Vocabulary
Quality
No Broken Windows
Strategic Design
And Remember: Your Opinion Matters!
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