Modelling of Business Component Applications 1st
Edition by Antonia Albani, Alexander Keiblinger,
Klaus Turowski, Christian Winnewisser ISBN
3540394036 9783540394037 pdf download
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identification-and-modelling-of-business-component-
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klaus-turowski-christian-winnewisser-isbn-3540394036-978354039/
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, Domain Based Identification and Modelling of Business
Component Applications
Antonia Albani, Alexander Keiblinger, Klaus Turowski, and
Christian Winnewisser
Chair of Business Information Systems (Wirtschaftsinformatik II)
University of Augsburg
Universitätsstraße 16, 86135 Augsburg, Germany
{antonia.albani, alexander.keiblinger, klaus.turowski,
christian.winnewisser}@wiwi.uni-augsburg.de
Abstract. This paper presents a process for the design of domain specific busi-
ness component applications to enforce the use of component based software
technologies. Starting from the notion that the direct mapping of business proc-
esses to business components often leads to inadequate results, a methodology
for identifying and refining business components based on the functional de-
composition of an application domain will be presented. The usability of the re-
sulting process will be shown with the example of a concept for strategic supply
chain development, which extends the traditional frame of reference in strategic
sourcing from a supplier-centric to a supply-chain-scope including the dynamic
modelling of strategic supply-chains.
1 Introduction
The idea of software systems made up from pre-fabricated software components that
could be exchanged via software component markets has been on the agenda of soft-
ware engineering at least since McIlroy has outlined his vision in 1968 [15]. The un-
derlying idea is to combine components from different vendors to an application
which is individual to each customer and where the compositional plug-and-play-like
reuse of black box components enables software component markets. Ideally, the ad-
vantages of both standard and individual software production are combined. Compo-
sitional reuse is a special kind of reuse technique as generative techniques [7] or code
and design scavenging [19, pp. 25–28]. The principle of modular design that is un-
derlying component based software systems is equally important for the discussion of
the technological as well as the economic advantages of component based software
systems. A rich literature on the general advantage of such systems exists, c.f. [4], [3],
[20], [21], [23]. Modular systems have been described as the result of a functional de-
composition [32] and the conception of modular systems has been thoroughly ana-
lysed by system theory.
According to [8, pp. 3–4], we define the term component as follows: A component
consists of different (software-) artefacts. It is reusable, self-contained and market-
able, provides services through well-defined interfaces, hides its implementation and
can be deployed in configurations unknown at the time of development. A business
L. Kalinichenko et al. (Eds.): ADBIS 2003, LNCS 2798, pp. 30–45, 2003.
© Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2003