4 research outputs found
A Longitudinal Study of Identifying and Paying Down Architectural Debt
Architectural debt is a form of technical debt that derives from the gap
between the architectural design of the system as it "should be" compared to
"as it is". We measured architecture debt in two ways: 1) in terms of
system-wide coupling measures, and 2) in terms of the number and severity of
architectural flaws. In recent work it was shown that the amount of
architectural debt has a huge impact on software maintainability and evolution.
Consequently, detecting and reducing the debt is expected to make software more
amenable to change. This paper reports on a longitudinal study of a healthcare
communications product created by Brightsquid Secure Communications Corp. This
start-up company is facing the typical trade-off problem of desiring
responsiveness to change requests, but wanting to avoid the ever-increasing
effort that the accumulation of quick-and-dirty changes eventually incurs. In
the first stage of the study, we analyzed the status of the "before" system,
which indicated the impacts of change requests. This initial study motivated a
more in-depth analysis of architectural debt. The results of this analysis were
used to motivate a comprehensive refactoring of the software system. The third
phase of the study was a follow-on architectural debt analysis which quantified
the improvements made. Using this quantitative evidence, augmented by
qualitative evidence gathered from in-depth interviews with Brightsquid's
architects, we present lessons learned about the costs and benefits of paying
down architecture debt in practice.Comment: Submitted to ICSE-SEIP 201