Preparing for Automated Derivation of Products in a Software Product Line

Abstract

Organizations that adopt a software product line strategy often have business goals that concern improving their ability to produce products by lowering product development costs, reducing the time to bring a product to market, or through other production improvements. Business goals such as these make automated product derivation an appealing strategy to a software product line organization. Automating production requires up-front investment, including the creation of both the core assets that will be assembled as products and the core assets that will perform the assembly. A software product line provides the ability to amortize the cost of the infrastructure over a set of products. This report views the process for automating the production of products in the context of a product production system. The process begins with the decision to automate, proceeds to the selection of the automation approach, and continues with the operation and management of the automated production capability. The process is illustrated by a case study automating the production process in the Carnegie Mellon (trademark) Software Engineering Institute's pedagogical product line.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Sep 01, 2005
Accession Number
ADA448223

Entities

People

  • John D. Mcgregor

Organizations

  • Carnegie Mellon University

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Human Systems

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Basic Programming Language
  • Case Studies
  • Commerce
  • Computer Programming
  • Computer Programs
  • Economic Models
  • Engineering
  • Grammars
  • Infrastructure
  • Investments
  • Language
  • Production
  • Production Engineering
  • Programming Languages
  • Software Design
  • Software Development
  • Xml

Fields of Study

  • Computer science
  • Engineering

Readers

  • Life Cycle Cost Analysis
  • Software Engineering.
  • Theoretical Analysis.