Volume 15, Number 3, 250-276, DOI: 10.1007/s10664-009-9121-0

Applying empirical software engineering to software architecture: challenges and lessons learned

Davide Falessi, Muhammad Ali Babar, Giovanni Cantone and Philippe Kruchten

From the issue entitled "Including a Special Section on Predictive Models in Software Engineering; Guest Editors: Thomas Ostrand and Guenther Ruhe"

View Related Documents

Abstract

In the last 15 years, software architecture has emerged as an important software engineering field for managing the development and maintenance of large, software-intensive systems. Software architecture community has developed numerous methods, techniques, and tools to support the architecture process (analysis, design, and review). Historically, most advances in software architecture have been driven by talented people and industrial experience, but there is now a growing need to systematically gather empirical evidence about the advantages or otherwise of tools and methods rather than just rely on promotional anecdotes or rhetoric. The aim of this paper is to promote and facilitate the application of the empirical paradigm to software architecture. To this end, we describe the challenges and lessons learned when assessing software architecture research that used controlled experiments, replications, expert opinion, systematic literature reviews, observational studies, and surveys. Our research will support the emergence of a body of knowledge consisting of the more widely-accepted and well-formed software architecture theories.

Keywords  Software architecture - Empirical software engineering

Editor: Daniel M. Berry

Fulltext Preview

Image of the first page of the fulltext document