Agile Architecture Ans- Agile architecture is a set of values and practices that support the active
evolution of the design and
architecture of a system, concurrent with the implementation of new business functionality. With this
approach, the architecture of a system, even a large one, evolves over time while simultaneously
supporting the needs of current users. This avoids Big Up-Front Design (BUFD) and the starting and
stopping of stage-gated methods.
Agile Release Train (ART) Ans- A long-lived and cross-functional team-of-Agile-teams, which along with
other stakeholders, develops and delivers solutions incrementally, using a series of fixed-length
Iterations within a Program Increment (PI) timebox. Aligns teams to a common business and technology
mission.
Agile Team Ans- A cross-functional group of five to ten people who have the ability and authority to
define, build, and test some element of Solution value—all in a short Iteration timebox. Specifically, it
incorporates the DevTeam, Scrum Master, and Product Owner roles.
Architectural Runway Ans- existing code, hardware components, etc., that technically enable near-term
business features
Built-in Quality Ans- Practices that ensure that each Solution element, at every increment, meets
appropriate quality standards throughout development.
Business Owners Ans- A small group of stakeholders who have the primary business and technical
responsibility for governance, compliance, and Return on Investment for a Solution developed by an
Agile Release Train (ART). They are key stakeholders on the ART who must evaluate fitness for use and
actively participate in certain ART events.
CapEx and OpEx Ans- Capital Expenses and Operating Expenses describe Lean-Agile financial accounting
practices in a Value Stream budget. In some cases, CapEx may include capitalized labor associate with
the development of intangible assets - such as software, intellectual property, and patents
, Capabilities Ans- A higher-level solution behavior that typically spans multiple ARTs. Capabilities are
sized and split into multiple features so that they can be implemented in a single PI.
Community of Practice (CoP) Ans- An organized group of people with common interests in a specific
technical or business domain. They collaborate regularly to share information, improve their skills, and
actively work on advancing the general knowledge of the domain.
Compliance Ans- A strategy and set of activities and artifacts that allow teams to apply Lean-Agile
development methods to build systems that have the highest possible possible quality, while
simultaneously assuring they meet any regulatory, industry, or relevant standards.
Continuous Delivery Pipeline Ans- CD Pipeline (also referred to as 'pipeline') represents the workflows,
activities, and automation needed to provide a continuous release of value to the end user.
Continuous Deployment (CD) Ans- The process that takes validated Features from Continuous
Integration and deploys them into the production environment, where they are tested and readied for
release. It is the third element in the four-part Continuous Delivery Pipeline of Continuous Exploration
(CE), Continuous Integration (CI), Continuous Deployment, and Release on Demand.
Continuous Exploration (CE) Ans- The process of constantly exploring market and user needs, and
defining a Vision, Roadmap, and set of Features that address those needs. It is the first element in the
four-part Continuous Delivery Pipeline, preceding Continuous Integration (CI) Continuous Deployment
(CD), and Release on Demand.
Continuous Integration (CI) Ans- The process of taking features from the Program Backlog and
developing, testing, integrating, and validating them in a staging environment where they are ready for
deployment and release. It is the second element in the four-part Continuous Delivery Pipeline.
Core Values Ans- The Four Core Values of alignment, Built-In Quality, transparency, and program
execution represent the fundamental beliefs that are key to SAFE's effectiveness. These guiding
principles represent the fundamental beliefs that are key to SAFe's effectiveness. These guiding
principles help dictate behavior and action for everyone who participates in a SAFe portfolio.
Customers Ans- The ultimate buyer of every Solution. They are an integral part of the Lean-Agile
development process and Value Stream and have specific responsibilities in SAFe.