"Designing Software Product Lines with UML is well-written, informative, and addresses a very important topic. It is a valuable contribution to the literature in this area, and offers practical guidance for software architects and engineers." --Alan Brown Distinguished Engineer, Rational Software, IBM Software Group "Gomaa's process and UML extensions allow development teams to focus on feature-oriented development and provide a basis for improving the level of reuse across multiple software development efforts. This book will be valuable to any software development professional who needs to manage across projects and wants to focus on creating software that is consistent, reusable, and modular in nature." --Jeffrey S Hammond Group Marketing Manager, Rational Software, IBM Software Group "This book brings together a good range of concepts for understanding software product lines and provides an organized method for developing product lines using object-oriented techniques with the UML. Once again, Hassan has done an excellent job in balancing the needs of both experienced and novice software engineers." --Robert G. Pettit IV, Ph.D.Adjunct Professor of Software Engineering, George Mason University "This breakthrough book provides a comprehensive step-by-step approach on how to develop software product lines, which is of great strategic benefit to industry. The development of software product lines enables significant reuse of software architectures. Practitioners will benefit from the well-defined PLUS process and rich case studies." --Hurley V. Blankenship II Program Manager, Justice and Public Safety, Science Applications International Corporation "The Product Line UML based Software engineering (PLUS) is leading edge. With the author's wide experience and deep knowledge, PLUS is well harmonized with architectural and design pattern technologies." --Michael Shin Assistant Professor, Texas Tech University Long a standard practice in traditional manufacturing, the concept of product lines is quickly earning recognition in the software industry. A software product line is a family of systems that shares a common set of core technical assets with preplanned extensions and variations to address the needs of specific customers or market segments.When skillfully implemented, a product line strategy can yield enormous gains in productivity, quality, and time-to-market. Studies indicate that if three or more systems with a degree of common functionality are to be developed, a product-line approach is significantly more cost-effective. To model and design families of systems, the analysis and design concepts for single product systems need to be extended to support product lines. Designing Software Product Lines with UML shows how to employ the latest version of the industry-standard Unified Modeling Language (UML 2.0) to reuse software requirements and architectures rather than starting the development of each new system from scratch. Through real-world case studies, the book illustrates the fundamental concepts and technologies used in the design and implementation of software product lines. This book describes a new UML-based software design method for product lines called PLUS (Product Line UML-based Software engineering). PLUS provides a set of concepts and techniques to extend UML-based design methods and processes for single systems in a new dimension to address software product lines.Using PLUS, the objective is to explicitly model the commonality and variability in a software product line. Hassan Gomaa explores how each of the UML modeling views--use case, static, state machine, and interaction modeling--can be extended to address software product families. He also discusses how software architectural patterns can be used to develop a reusable component-based architecture for a product line and how to express this architecture as a UML platform-independent model that can then be mapped to a platform-specific model.Key topics *Software product line engineering process, which extends the Unified Development Software Process to address software product lines *Use case modeling, including modeling the common and variable functionality of a product line *Incorporating feature modeling into UML for modeling common, optional, and alternative product line features *Static modeling, including modeling the boundary of the product line and information-intensive entity classes *Dynamic modeling, including using interaction modeling to address use-case variability *State machines for modeling state-dependent variability *Modeling class variability using inheritance and parameterization *Software architectural patterns for product lines *Component-based distributed design using the new UML 2. 0 capability for modeling components, connectors, ports, and provided and required interfaces *Detailed case studies giving a step-by-step solution to real-world product line problems Designing Software Product Lines with UML is ...
This book is one of the most intense moments of self-hate I inflicted upon myself. It's a book written for only, and I repeat, only for people who are expected to be the most formal UML Software Architects.
I read it at a time of great inspiration to use "Enterprise Architect" and "Visual Paradigm". While I eventually settled for 1-2 years with "Visual Paradigm" and created so many diagrams, that even live now to this date, in 2024, when I write the review, I honestly missed the point of software architecture.
It's about communicating and being understood. This book didn't help me in that regard. But hey, if it can help you in situations where you need to be the most up-to-the-standard UML-capable software architect, this book is going to help you!
Don't expect it to teach you Software architecture, though.