Monthly Archives: March 2016

Sv-8

Cutout: While the TOGAF/DoDAF working group initially set out simply to compare the two frameworks, its efforts recognized that the frameworks were complimentary, meaning architects today can immediately use the TOGAF ADM to build DoDAF architectures, and leverage a more robust, comprehensive, and complete enterprise architecture development method designed with business alignment in mind

About the Authors
Fatma Dandashi is currently leading an Object Management Group (OMG) effort to define a UML profile for the DOD Architecture Framework. Prior to this she supported the development of the Air Force Enterprise Architecture for SAF/XC. Dr. Dandashi was task lead on the MITRE development team responsible for the DoD Architecture Framework Version 1.0 (Volumes I and II), and currently serves on the working group developing DoDAF Version 2.0. She has a PhD in information technology from George Mason University, a Master of Science in computer science from the University of Louisiana (Lafayette), and a Bachelor of Arts in computers/business administration from the Lebanese American University.

Terence Blevins is branch chief and lead architect on the Air Force Operational Support Enterprise Architecture at Mitre. He supports the U.S. Air Force in the role of branch chief and lead architect of the Air Force Operational Support Enterprise Architecture. Terence has been involved with the architecture discipline since the ‘80s when he was at NCR as director of strategic architecture. He has been involved with evolving this discipline since 1996 when he was first introduced to The Open Group’s Architecture Forum. He was its co-chair and a frequent content contributor to TOGAF including the Business Scenario Method. Terence was previously vice-president and CIO of The Open Group where he contributed to its Vision of Boundary-less Information Flow. Mr. Blevins holds undergraduate and masters degrees in mathematics from Youngstown State University. He is TOGAF 8-certified.

Rolf Siegers is Raytheon’s corporate director of architecture & systems integration and an Engineering Fellow. He joined Raytheon in 1984 and leads its Enterprise Architecture Process (REAP) Initiative, a standards-based unification of several architecture frameworks and a company-wide architecting process. Rolf also sits on Raytheon’s corporate Architecture Review Board (ARB), leading and supporting veriious architecture-related initiatives. His program experience includes leading several multi-discipline software architecture teams for large-scale, software-intensive national and international systems since 1997. He is a certified TOGAF-8 architect (The Open Group), a ATAM Evaluator (SEI), and a Software Architecture Professional (SEI). He has bachelor degrees in computer science and mathematics from Huntingdon College and is a member of IEEE and INCOSE.

Judith Jones has served as an advisor to Brussels, CCTA and Industry Organizations on Enterprise Architecture and IS/IT Architecture and Frameworks, eGovernment, Practitioner of TOGAF, and Prince 2. Her background experience includes 10 years as an independent consultant and 20+ years as a business manager with ICL, now Fujitsu Services. She is an experienced program manager and principal consultant with significant skills in customer-centric programs including customer relationship management, enterprise architecture, operational business and IT infrastructures. Her consulting experience includes business change, strategy development and communications, business architecture, business development and marketing, sales, strategy and partnership alignment, business re-engineering to change, specify and deliver customer value, process and commercial initiatives. Judith is an extremely active member of The Open Group and has worked with its Architecture Forum to establish Enterprise Architecture development processes and strategies suitable for global government and the private sector. She currently leads the TOGAF 9 development effort.

So Many Frameworks…So Little Time: What’s an Architect To Do?
The relationships between The Open Group Architecture Framework and the U.S. Department of Defense Architecture Framework

by Fatma Dandashi, Terence Blevins, Rolf Siegers, and Judith Jones

Numerous architecture framework standards have been developed and have matured over the past decade. Some of these standards overlap in their focus areas, and others address completely different aspects of the architecting process. In this latter case, a natural synergy can sometimes be identified and leveraged between frameworks. An industry working group was formed to analyze and document the relationships between The Open Group Architecture Framework and the U.S. Department of Defense Architecture Framework, identifying complementary areas between these two standards. This article is a brief summary of that initiative’s detailed 50-page white paper, “The Open Group Architecture Framework and the U.S. Department of Defense Architecture Framework.”
The Open Group Architecture Framework (TOGAF) is primarily focused on architecting methodology — i.e, the “how to” aspect of architecture without prescribing description constructs to document the architecture. The U.S. Department of Defense Architecture Framework (DoDAF) is focused on architecture description via a set of views without specifying any methodology. The complementary aspects of these two frameworks lead to the question: “Can architects benefit from leveraging both TOGAF and DoDAF together?” Two years ago, this is what a working group that included representatives from MITRE, Raytheon, and Architecting-the-Enterprise — supported by members of The Open Group Architecture Forum — set out to study. Core members of the group included individuals from the official DoDAF and TOGAF standards working groups. The baseline versions of the documents used were TOGAF Version 8.1 and DoDAF Version 1.0. Upcoming revisions of both these standards will heighten their support of architecting service-oriented systems, and both are valuable enablers to architects and architecture teams.
Below are some of the group’s key findings, as well as insights into how architects can use these frameworks to align their business objectives better with IT infrastructure and systems.

Architecture Methodology: The Open Group Architecture Framework
The Open Group first developed the TOGAF Architecture Development Method (ADM) in 1995, baselining it from the Technical Architecture Framework for Information Management (TAFIM), a series of architecture guidance documents provided to them by the U.S. Department of Defense. The DOD spent millions of dollars and several years evolving its TAFIM before turning it over to the Open Group for its ongoing maturation and dissemination across government and industry. TAFIM was subsequently retired.
The ADM is a prescriptive, step-by-step instruction guide for “how to” architect. It’s presented in a series of phases that guide the architect or architecture team through the architecting lifecycle of system development. The first seven releases of TOGAF ADM (1995-2001) were focused on providing technical architecting guidance. The 2002 release of TOGAF 8.0 extended this earlier technical focus into four areas: business, data, applications, and technology architectures. This “collection” of architectures is commonly known as enterprise architecture — the interrelation and integration of business and technology. This same business and technology interrelation and integration are at the heart of service-oriented architecture design and implementation.

Architecture Description: U.S. Department of Defense Architecture Framework (DoDAF)
The primary focus of the DoDAF is architecture description — it prescribes a specific set of models that illustrate the architecture of concern. The framework defines 26 products (see Table 1) that reflect three different architectural viewpoints: operational, systems, and technical standards. DoDAF was developed to support interoperability between systems whose architectures are described with this framework. It’s easier to determine how to integrate systems when they are modeled in a “common language” so that system interfaces, data formats and exchanges, implemented standards, etc. can be analyzed with the operational and system behaviors and structure.
DoDAF has formed the basis for several other frameworks such the U.K.’s Ministry of Defense Architecture Framework (MODAF) and the soon-to-be-published Standardization Agreement (STANAG) NATO Architecture Framework. DoDAF is comprised of two volumes: “Definitions & Guidelines” and “Product Descriptions.”
A supplemental DoDAF Deskbook was also published to provide guidance to DoDAF users. This Deskbook consolidates supporting information such as white papers, case studies, discussion on the Core Architecture Data Model (CADM), architecture tools, Universal Reference Resources (URRs), and the Federal Enterprise Architecture (FEA) reference models.

Table 1 DoDAF Version 1.0 – List of Products
Applicable View
Framework
Product
Framework ?Product Name
General Description
All Views
AV-1
Overview and Summary Information
Scope, purpose, intended users, environment depicted, analytical findings
All Views
AV-2
Integrated Dictionary
Architecture data repository with definitions of all terms used in all products
Operational
OV-1
High-Level Operational Concept Graphic
High-level graphical/textual description of operational concept
Operational
OV-2
Operational Node Connectivity Description
Operational nodes, connectivity & information exchange between nodes
Operational
OV-3
Operational Information Exchange Matrix
Information exchanged between nodes and the relevant attributes of that exchange
Operational
OV-4
Organizational Relationships Chart
Organizational, role, or other relationships among organizations
Operational
OV-5
Operational Activity Model
Capabilities, operational activities, relationships among activities, inputs, and outputs. Overlays can show cost, performing nodes, or other pertinent information.
Operational
OV-6a
Operational Rules Model
One of the three products used to describe operational activity – identifies the business rules that constrain operations
Operational
OV-6b
Operational State Transition Description
One of the three products used to describe operational activity – identifies business process responses to events
Operational
OV-6c
Operational Event/Trace Description
One of the three products used to describe operational activity – traces actions in a scenario or sequence of events
Operational
OV-7
Logical Data Model
Documentation of the system data requirements and structural business process rules of the Operational View.
Systems
SV-1
Systems Interface Description
Identification of systems nodes, systems, and system items and their interconnections within and between nodes
Systems
SV-2
Systems Communications Description
Systems nodes, systems, and system items, and their related communications lay-downs
Systems
SV-3
Systems-to-Systems Matrix
Relationships among systems in a given architecture; can be designed to show relationships of interest, e.g., system-type interfaces, planned versus existing interfaces, etc.
Systems
SV-4
Systems Functionality Description
Functions performed by systems and the system data flows among system functions
Systems
SV-5
Operational Activity to Systems Function Traceability Matrix
Mapping of systems back to capabilities or of system functions back to operational activities
Systems
SV-6
Systems Data Exchange Matrix
Provides details of system data elements being exchanged between systems and the attributes of that exchange
Systems
SV-7
Systems Performance Parameters Matrix
Performance characteristics of System View elements for the appropriate timeframe(s)
Systems
SV-8
System Evolution Description
Planned incremental steps toward migrating a suite of systems to a more efficient suite, or toward evolving a current system to a future implementation
Systems
SV-9
System Technology Forecast
Emerging technologies and software/hardware products that are expected to be available in a given set of time frames that will affect the future development of the architecture
Systems
SV-10a
Systems Rules Model
One of three products used to describe systems functionality – identifies constraints that are imposed on systems functionality due to some aspect of systems design or implementation
Systems
SV-10b
Systems State Transition Description
One of three products used to describe systems functionality – identifies responses of a system to events
Systems
SV-10c
Systems Event/Trace Description
One of three products used to describe systems functionality – identifies system-specific refinements of critical sequences of events described in the Operational View
Systems
SV-11
Physical Schema
Physical implementation of the Logical Data Model entities, e.g., message formats, file structures, physical schema
Technical
TV-1
Technical Standards Profile
Listing of standards that apply to Systems View elements in a given architecture
Technical
TV-2
Technical Standards Forecast
Description of emerging standards and their potential impact on current Systems View elements within a set of time frames

Results Summary
The TOGAF/DoDAF working group validated its original hypothesis that there is synergy across a number of areas between these two frameworks, where DoDAF views can be used throughout the steps of the TOGAF ADM phases to develop a model of the overall architecture. The model can be used to document architectural decisions made following the TOGAF architecture methodology and through ongoing iteration and evolution of all architecture artifacts across the system development lifecycle. The general relationships between the DoDAF views and TOGAF phases are as follows:

DoDAF’s All Views primarily aligns with TOGAF Preliminary Phase and Phase A: Architecture Vision.
DoDAF’s Operational View primarily aligns with TOGAF Phase B: Business Architecture and Phase C: Information Systems Architecture activities.
DoDAF’s Systems View primarily aligns with TOGAF Phase C: Information Systems Architecture, Phase D: Technology Architecture, Phase F: Migration Planning, and Phase E: Opportunities and Solutions.
DoDAF’s Technical Standards View primarily aligns with TOGAF Phase D: Technology Architecture, Technical Reference Model, and Phase E: Opportunities and Solutions.

Table 2 overviews the primary relationships identified through analysis of these two leading architecture frameworks. Specific tailoring guidelines to adapt the TOGAF ADM methodology steps for DoDAF model outputs are documented in the detailed white paper of this analysis effort.

Table 2: TOGAF ADM Phase Mapping to DoDAF Models
TOGAF?Phase
Focus
Applicable DoDAF Models
Preliminary
Framework & Principles
AV-1, OV-1
A
Vision
AV-1, OV-1
B
Business Architecture
AV-2, OV-1, OV-2, OV-3, OV-4, OV-5, OV-6
C
Information Systems Architecture: Data Architecture
OV-7, SV-11
Information Systems Architecture: Applications Architecture
SV-4, SV-5, SV-6, SV-10
D
Technology Architecture
SV-1, SV-2, SV-3, SV-4 (Refined), SV-5, SV-7, SV-10 (Refined), TV-1
E
Opportunities & Solutions
SV-8, SV-9, TV-2
F
Migration Planning
SV-8
G
Implementation Governance
AV-1, OV-1
H
Change Management
SV-9, TV-2

Relevance of the Findings
While the TOGAF/DoDAF working group initially set out simply to compare the two frameworks, its efforts recognized that the frameworks were complimentary. What this means for architects today is that they can immediately use the TOGAF ADM to build DoDAF architectures, and, in doing so, leverage a more robust, comprehensive, and complete enterprise architecture development method designed with business alignment in mind.
The working group also observed that both frameworks are currently dealing with potential gaps such as support for service orientation. The organizations that maintain these different frameworks would benefit should they come together to harmonize their efforts and work on evolving their respective frameworks to deal with the gaps such as security viewpoints, Service Oriented Architectures, and net centricity. For the architect, this ultimately means being better equipped to practice within a much broader space, which is a significant advantage in today’s competitive environment.

Conclusion
Each complex architecting endeavor requires several key elements to be successful: repeatable methodology, standardized output models, formal validation, governance, collaboration guidelines, configuration management, tools, and patterns. The architect can address many of these needs through the application of the Open Group’s Architecture Development Method as a disciplined process in developing the Department of Defense Architecture Framework set of views to model the architecture.

So Many Frameworks…So Little Time: What’s An Architect To Do?

Page PAGE 2 of NUMPAGES 11

Togaf 8 Adm

What Does Reconciliation Mean?
Reconciliation
A reconciling or being reconciled
Reconcile
To bring together again in love or friendship
To induce to accept something disagreeable
To reach a compromise agreement about
To make or show to be consistent
We’ ll focus on 4 today -we think that TOGAF and TBI are consistent
Position
TBI and TOGAF ADM are both great candidates for a Global Integration Framework
Why TOGAF ADM
Any large effort requires enterprise architecture
Doing enterprise architecture requires an architecture development method
An enterprise architecture method will include consideration of integration given the appropriate situation -in most cases
An open architecture method is less likely to create new integration challenges
Why TBI
Any large project requires integration implementation plans
TBI is a proven method for dealing with integration details
What can be done downstream harden the points of interaction between TOGAF ADM and TBI to ensure interoperability
A Definition of Enterprise Architecture
The structure of components, their interrelationships, and the principles and guidelines governing their design and evolution over time
Enterprise architecture
Covers the components in an enterprise
organizations, processes, humans, data, applications, technology etc.
Enterprise means enterprise-wide, not everything in the enterprise An enterprise architecture effort must address a specific problem, not all problems at once!
The Role of Architecture
Architecture is fast becoming one of the main instruments for improving Business IT Alignment.
It is time to broaden our view and build systems that last and that keep delivering value to the business. Business and IT Architecture play a pivotal role in achieving this goal..

Pressures on IT
Align Information Technology to Business
Increase accountability to improve cost performance
Drive accountability of spending
Ensure network availability
Ensure security
Drive standardization
Other Pressures
Effective business process to reconcile and adequately govern
Short term spending
Short product life cycles
Rapid technological change
Sub-optimal spending
Dealing with hidden costs
Sub-optimal vendor management
And the Impact?
Proliferation of point solutions
High costs of integration
Not leveraging standards
Few discount deals
Higher support costs
Less responsive support
High costs and long lead times to deliver security
Higher risk of security
Disconnected decisions
Lack of effectiveness
TOGAF 8 ADM
Designed to address key issues!
Lowering costs
Control costs
Delivering new value
Better operational efficiency of business
Better understand impact of change
Holistic requirements management
Lower risk
Faster decisions
The journey provides benefits at each step!
TBI Deliverables Map
TOGAF ADM Deliverables Map
Intersections at
TOGAF ADM Feeds to TBI
Summary
TBI and TOGAF ADM are both great for GIF
Any large effort requires enterprise architecture and doing so requires an open ADM
Enterprise architecture method includes consideration of integration
An open architecture method is less likely to create new integration challenges
Any large project requires integration implementation plans
TBI is a proven method for dealing with integration details
We can harden the points of interaction between TOGAF ADM and TBI to ensure interoperability for GIF
Leverage will get us all to the top!
Contact Details
Backups
Presentation Outline
Background
Why Enterprise Architecture is Important
TOGAF and TOGAF History
TOGAF and TBI
Summary
Integration Is a Big Issue
Gartner Dataquest forecasts Worldwide End-User IT Spending will grow
from $2.7 US trillion in 2001
to greater than $3.0 US trillion in 2002 and
reach $3.4 US trillion in 2003
The worldwide integration services market is expected to see a 25% compounded annual growth rate between 2001 and 2005 to $116.5 US billion, according to IDC
CIO magazine survey says companies spend over 35% on integrating systems and processes
Presentation Outline
Background
Why Enterprise Architecture is Important
TOGAF and TOGAF History
TOGAF and TBI
Summary
CIOs Have Issues in Common
In general there is a trend
Demands on IT increasing
IT budgets are decreasing or flat
CIOs must do more for less, so
Look for leverage
Outsourcing
Off shore development
Open source
Collaborative development
Reusable building blocks
Presentation Outline
Background
Why Enterprise Architecture is Important
TOGAF and TOGAF History
TOGAF and TBI
Summary
TOGAF 8 Scope
TOGAF covers the development of four related types of architecture:

Business architecture
Data or information architecture
Application architecture
Technology architecture
TOGAF 8 -Enterprise Edition
Enterprise ADM
The Enterprise Continuum
Resource Base
Architecture Compliance Reviews
Architecture Principles
Architecture Views
Architecture Tool evaluation criteria
Business Scenarios
Architecture Governance
Case Studies
Comparisons with other Frameworks
Mapping to Zachman Framework
TOGAF Origins
A customer initiative
A framework, not an architecture
A framework for developing architectures to meet different business needs
Not a one-size-fits-all architecture
Originally based on Technical Architectural Framework for Information Management (TAFIM) from US Department of Defense
TOGAF Development
1994: Requirement

1995: TOGAF Version 1

1996: TOGAF Version 2

1997: TOGAF Version 3

1998: TOGAF Version 4

1999: TOGAF Version 5

2000: TOGAF Version 6

2001: TOGAF Version 7

2002: TOGAF Version 8

Dod Architecture Framework Overview

DoD Architecture Framework Overview

Alessio Mosto
May, 2004
Outline
DODAF Definitions and Purpose
DODAF Products
DODAF Documents Overview
Future Evolution of DODAF

Q&A
DoD Architecture Framework 1.0
The Department of Defense (DoD) Architecture Framework (DODAF)
Defines a common approach for describing, presenting, and comparing DoD enterprise architectures
Facilitates the use of common principles, assumptions and terminology

The principal objective is to
Ensure that architecture descriptions can be compared and related across organizational boundaries, including Joint and multi-national boundaries
History of the Framework
DoD Policy
Recent DoD policy highlights use of architectures for:
Understanding the DoD as an enterprise
Identification of operational requirements
Rationalization of IT investment decisions
Improvements to interoperability among various systems
Architecture Definition
The structure of components, their relationships, and the principles and guidelines governing their design and evolution over time. DoD Integrated Architecture Panel, 1995, based on IEEE STD 610.12
An architecture is the fundamental organization of a system embodied in its components, their relationships to each other, and to the environment, and the principles guiding its design and evolution. IEEE STD 1471-2000

Architecture vs. Design
System Architecture is used to:
Make buy decisions
Discriminate between options
Discover the true requirements
Drive one or more systems to a common use or purpose

System Design is used to:
Develop system components
Build the system
Understand configuration changes as the system is modified
Enterprise competitive edge
An enterprise’ s competitive edge and ultimate success are enabled by its ability to rapidly respond to changing business strategies, governance, and technologies
The DoD environment spells this competitive edge as victory
The competitive edge translates into higher levels of customer satisfaction, shorter work cycles, and reductions in schedules, maintenance costs, and development time, all resulting in lower overall cost of ownership
Enterprise Architecture
Enterprise Architecture is the key facilitating ingredient providing a holistic view and a mechanism for enabling the design and development as well as the communication and understanding of the enterprise
The overarching goals of enterprise architecture are to manage the complexity of the enterprise, align business strategies and implementations, and facilitate rapid change in order to maintain business and technical advantages
Enterprise vs. System
System Architecture is like blueprints for a building

Enterprise Architecture is like urban planning
Architecture Framework
An architecture framework is a tool It should describe a method for designing an information system in terms of a set of building blocks, and for showing how the building blocks fit together. It should contain a set of tools and provide a common vocabulary. It should also include a list of recommended standards and compliant products that can be used to implement the building blocks. [TOGAF 8, OpenGroup]
Basic Principles – An Integrated Architecture with Three Views
DODAF Products – Graphic, Textual, and Tabular
DODAF Products
The DODAF describes a set of 26 work products to ensure uniformity and standardization in the documentation and communication of architecture
The 26 DODAF views are designed to document the entire architecture, from requirements to implementation
DODAF Products – Views
The list of products is refined into four views:
All Views (AV): is the overarching information describing the architecture plans, scope, and definitions
Operational View (OV): focuses on the behaviours and functions describing the enterprise mission aspects
System View (SV): describes the system and applications supporting the mission functions
Technical Standards View (TV): describes the policies, standards and constraints
DODAF Products
DODAF Products
DODAF Products

DODAF Products – Essential
The current DODAF version indicates a subset of work products that should be developed at a minimum (essential)
AV-1: Overview and Summary Information
AV-2: Integrated Dictionary
OV-2: Operational Node Connectivity Description
OV-3: Operational Information Exchange Matrix
OV-5: Operational Activity Model
SV-1: System Interface Description
TV-1: Technical Standards Profile
AV-1 & AV-2
OV-2 -Operational Node Connectivity Description
OV-3 -Operational Information Exchange Matrix
Table Headers Specified in Framework:
Name of Operational Needline Supported (from OV-2)
Name of Information Exchange
Nature of Transaction (Mission/Scenario, Language, Content, Size/Units, Media, Collaborative or One-Way?)
Purpose or Triggering Event
Information Source (ID of Producing Node Element, Owning Organization of Node, Name of Producing Activity, UJTL ID)
Information Destination (ID of Receiving Node Element, Owning Organization of Node, Name of Receiving Activity, UJTL ID)
Performance Requirements (Frequency, Timeliness, Throughput, Other)
Information Assurance Attributes (Classification Restrictions, Criticality/Priority, Integrity Checks Required, Assured Authorization to Send/Receive)
Threats (Physical, Electronic, Political/Economic)
Operational Environment (Weather, Terrain, Policy/Doctrine Constraints)
OV-5 -Operational Activity Model
SV-1 -System Interface Description
TV-1 -Technical Standards Profile
Problems
Conspicuously absent are the all-important business, financial, and technical analysis of alternatives -information needed to drive enterprise architectural decisions
DoD Architecture Framework
Volume I: Definitions, Guidelines , and Background
Covers value of architectures, measures, use in DoD processes
Volume II: Product Descriptions
Covers Structured Analysis and UML Representations
Deskbook: Architecture Guidance
Provides guidance on development, use, incorporating security into the architecture
Release Date -November 2003
Web Site:
aitc.aitcnet.org/dodaf/
Key Changes in Volume II
Guidance on developing architecture products using UML
Greater emphasis on architecture data underlying the architecture products
Future Evolution Areas
Define a DODAF Object Model to:
Validate and Clarify the information definitions provided by the DODAF
To capture the architecture data elements (object and relationships) described by DODAF
Use DODAF definitions to define an object model

Validate and Clarify the notation definitions intended by DODAF
Adjust the object and relationship definitions to include graphics (e.g., modeling notation) and/or formatting characteristics that are required to be common
Facilitate the common usage of such a model
Define an ontology: identify the generalizations / specializations (supertypes / subtypes) that are appropriate
Provide clear, concise descriptions for all the data elements
Future Evolution Areas (Cont’ d)
Benefits – A DODAF object model will:
Provide a common set of objects and relationship definitions (requirements) that can be used by tool vendors to supply software tools that support the development of DODAF-Compliant architectures

Provide a common set of objects and relationship definitions against which a standard interface can be defined to:
Enable the sharing of architecture model / products between different tools
Enable the implementation of a common repository for architecture data
Future Evolution Areas (Cont’ d)
Define a common ontology of architecture elements
Address baseline (current) and objective (target) architectures
Address use of architectures to measure mission effectiveness (capabilities and measures of effectiveness)
DODAF prospect
February 9, 2004. Department of Defense CIO John P. Stenbit approved Version 1.0 of the Department of Defense Architectural Framework (DODAF) for immediate use. All architectures developed or approved after December 1, 2003 must comply with the new framework. Architectures developed prior to that date must be converted upon any version updates

Not only for military mission and for DoD
Also for civilian enterprise
Q&A

References
Department of Defense Architecture Framework Working Group. DoD Architecture Framework Ver. 1.0. Washington, D.C.: Department of Defense, Nov. 2003 aitc.aitcnet.org/dodaf

DoD Architecture Framework Overview -Dr. Fatma Dandashi -October 2003 www.opengroup.org/public/member/ proceedings/q403/dandashi.pdf

Enterprise DoD Architecture Framework and the Motivational View -D.B. Robi -Open Forum, April 2004 www.stsc.hill.af.mil/crosstalk/2004/04/0404Robi.html
References
Leveraging DoD/C4ISR Architecture Framework Products for Developmental and Operational Testing -Annette Ensing (The MITRE Corporation) and LTC Phil Hallenbeck (USA Operational Test Command) -The Software Technology Conference, May 2002 www.stc-online.org/stc2002proceedings/ SpkrPDFS/ThrTracs/p728.pdf

DoD Architecture Framework and Software Architecture Workshop Report -March 2003 www.ichnet.org/DODAF%20SEI%20report.pdf

Breakout Session 10B Outbriefing -James Martin -Ground System Architectures Workshop, 2004 sunset.usc.edu/gsaw/gsaw2004/s14/10b_outbrief.pdf

Sotware Productivity Consortium www.software.org/
Thanks
Open Group
Open Group is an international vendor and technology-neutral consortium

TOGAF, The Open Group Architecture Framework, is an industry standard architecture framework that may be used freely by any organization wishing to develop an information systems architecture for use within that organization

Sv-8

Numerous architecture framework standards have been developed and matured over the past decade. Some of these standards overlap in their focus areas, and others address completely different aspects of the architecting process. In this latter case, a natural synergy can sometimes be identified and leveraged between frameworks. An industry working group was formed to analyze and document the relationships between The Open Group Architecture Framework (TOGAF) and the U.S. Department of Defense Architecture Framework (DoDAF), identifying complementary areas between these two standards. This article is a brief summary of that initiative’s detailed 50-page white paper, “The Open Group Architecture Framework (TOGAF) And the U.S. Department of Defense Architecture Framework (DoDAF).”

The Open Group Architecture Framework (TOGAF) has a primary focus on architecting methodology —i.e, the “how to” aspect of architecture, without prescribing description constructs to document the architecture. The U.S. Department of Defense Architecture Framework (DoDAF) has a primary focus on architecture description via a set of views, without specifying methodology. The complementary aspects of these two frameworks lead to the question: “Can architects benefit from leveraging both TOGAF and DoDAF together?” Two years ago, this is what a working group that included representatives from MITRE, Raytheon, and Architecting-the-Enterprise—supported by members of The Open Group Architecture Forum—set out to study. Core members of the group included individuals from the official DoDAF and TOGAF standards working groups. The baseline versions of the documents used were TOGAF Version 8.1 and DoDAF Version 1.0. Upcoming revisions of both these standards will heighten their support of architecting service-oriented systems, and both are valuable enablers to architects and architecture teams.

Below are some of the group’s key findings, as well as insights on how architects can use these frameworks to better align their business objectives with IT infrastructure and systems.

Architecture Methodology: The Open Group Architecture Framework (TOGAF)
The Open Group first developed the TOGAF Architecture Development Method (ADM) in 1995, baselining it from the Technical Architecture Framework for Information Management (TAFIM), a series of architecture guidance documents provided to them by the U.S. Department of Defense. The DoD spent millions of dollars and several years evolving their TAFIM before turning it over to The Open Group for its ongoing maturation and dissemination across government and industry. TAFIM was subsequently retired.

The ADM is a prescriptive, step-by-step instruction guide for “how to” architect. It is presented in a series of phases that guide the architect or architecture team through the architecting lifecycle of system development. The first seven releases of TOGAF ADM (1995-2001) were focused on providing technical architecting guidance. The 2002 release of TOGAF 8.0 extended this earlier technical focus into four areas: business, data, applications, and technology architectures. This “collection” of architectures is commonly known as enterprise architecture—the interrelation and integration of business and technology. This same business and technology interrelation and integration are at the heart of service-oriented architecture design and implementation.

Architecture Description: U.S. Department of Defense Architecture Framework (DoDAF)
The primary focus of the DoDAF is architecture description—it prescribes a specific set of models that illustrate the architecture of concern. The framework defines 26 products (see Table 1) that reflect three different architectural viewpoints: Operational, Systems, and Technical Standards. DoDAF was developed to support interoperability between systems whose architectures are described with this framework. It is easier to determine how to integrate systems when they are modeled in a “common language” so that system interfaces, data formats and exchanges, implemented standards, etc. can be analyzed with the operational and system behaviors and structure.

DoDAF has formed the basis for several other frameworks such the UK’s Ministry of Defense Architecture Framework (MODAF) and the soon to be published Standardization Agreement (STANAG) NATO Architecture Framework. DoDAF is comprised of two volumes: Definitions & Guidelines and Product Descriptions. A supplemental DoDAF Deskbook was also published to provide guidance to DoDAF users. This Deskbook consolidates supporting information such as white papers, case studies, discussion on the Core Architecture Data Model (CADM), architecture tools, Universal Reference Resources (URRs), and the Federal Enterprise Architecture (FEA) reference models.

Table 1: DoDAF Version 1.0 – List of Products
Applicable View
Framework
Product
Framework ?Product Name
General Description
All Views
AV-1
Overview and Summary Information
Scope, purpose, intended users, environment depicted, analytical findings
All Views
AV-2
Integrated Dictionary
Architecture data repository with definitions of all terms used in all products
Operational
OV-1
High-Level Operational Concept Graphic
High-level graphical/textual description of operational concept
Operational
OV-2
Operational Node Connectivity Description
Operational nodes, connectivity & information exchange between nodes
Operational
OV-3
Operational Information Exchange Matrix
Information exchanged between nodes and the relevant attributes of that exchange
Operational
OV-4
Organizational Relationships Chart
Organizational, role, or other relationships among organizations
Operational
OV-5
Operational?Activity Model
Capabilities, operational activities, relationships among activities, inputs and outputs. Overlays can show cost, performing nodes, or other pertinent information.
Operational
OV-6a
Operational Rules Model
One of the three products used to describe operational activity–identifies the business rules that constrain operation
Operational
OV-6b
Operational State Transition Description
One of the three products used to describe operational activity– identifies business process responses to events
Operational
OV-6c
Operational Event/Trace Description
One of the three products used to describe operational activity–?traces actions in a scenario or sequence of events
Operational
OV-7
Logical Data Model
Documentation of the system data requirements and structural business process rules of the Operational View.
Systems
SV-1
Systems Interface Description
Identification of systems nodes, systems, and system items and their interconnections, within and between nodes
Systems
SV-2
Systems Communications Description
Systems nodes, systems, and system items, and their related communications lay-downs
Systems
SV-3
Systems-to-Systems Matrix
Relationships among systems in a given architecture; can be designed to show relationships of interest, e.g., system-type interfaces, planned vs. existing interfaces, etc.
Systems
SV-4
Systems Functionality Description
Functions performed by systems and the system data flows among system functions
Systems
SV-5
Operational Activity to Systems Function Traceability Matrix
Mapping of systems back to capabilities or of system functions back to operational activities
Systems
SV-6
Systems Data ?Exchange Matrix
Provides details of system data elements being exchanged between systems and the attributes of that exchange
Systems
SV-7
Systems Performance Parameters Matrix
Performance characteristics of System View elements, for the appropriate timeframe(s)
Systems
SV-8
System Evolution Description
Planned incremental steps toward migrating a suite of systems to a more efficient suite, or toward evolving a current system to a future?implementation
Systems
SV-9
System Technology Forecast
Emerging technologies and software/hardware products that are expected to be available in a given set of time frames, and that will affect future development of the architecture
Systems
SV-10a
Systems Rules Model
One of three products used to describe systems functionality–identifies constraints that are imposed on systems functionality due to some aspect of systems design or implementation
Systems
SV-10b
Systems State Transition Description
One of three products used to describe systems functionality–identifies responses of a system to events
Systems
SV-10c
Systems Event/Trace Description
One of three products used to describe systems functionality–identifies system-specific refinements of critical sequences of events described in the Operational View
Systems
SV-11
Physical Schema
Physical implementation of the Logical Data Model entities, e.g., message formats, file structures, physical schema
Technical
TV-1
Technical Standards Profile
Listing of standards that apply to Systems View elements in a given architecture
Technical
TV-2
Technical Standards Forecast
Description of emerging standards and potential impact on current Systems View elements, within a set of time frames

Results Summary
The TOGAF/DoDAF working group validated their original hypothesis that there is synergy across a number of areas between these two frameworks, where DoDAF views can be used throughout the steps of the TOGAF ADM phases to develop a model of the overall architecture. The model can be used to document architectural decisions made following the TOGAF architecture methodology and through ongoing iteration and evolution of all architecture artifacts across the life cycle of system development. The general relationships between the DoDAF views and TOGAF phases are as follows:
DoDAF’s All Views primarily aligns with TOGAF Preliminary Phase and Phase A: Architecture Vision.
DoDAF’s Operational View primarily aligns with TOGAF Phase B: Business Architecture and Phase C: Information Systems Architecture activities.
DoDAF’s Systems View primarily aligns with TOGAF Phase C: Information Systems Architecture, Phase D: Technology Architecture, Phase F: Migration Planning, and Phase E: Opportunities and Solutions.
DoDAF’s Technical Standards View primarily aligns with TOGAF Phase D: Technology Architecture, Technical Reference Model, and Phase E: Opportunities and Solutions.

Table 2 overviews the primary relationships identified through analysis of these two leading architecture frameworks. Specific tailoring guidelines to adapt the TOGAF ADM methodology steps for DoDAF model outputs are documented in the detailed white paper of this analysis effort.

Table 2: TOGAF ADM Phase Mapping to DoDAF Models
TOGAF?Phase
Focus
Applicable DoDAF Models
Preliminary
Framework & Principles
AV-1, OV-1
A
Vision
AV-1, OV-1
B
Business Architecture
AV-2, OV-1, OV-2, OV-3, OV-4, OV-5, OV-6
C
Information Systems Architecture: Data Architecture
OV-7, SV-11
Information Systems Architecture: Applications Architecture
SV-4, SV-5, SV-6, SV-10
D
Technology Architecture
SV-1, SV-2, SV-3, SV-4 (Refined), SV-5, SV-7, SV-10 (Refined), TV-1
E
Opportunities & Solutions
SV-8, SV-9, TV-2
F
Migration Planning
SV-8
G
Implementation Governance
AV-1, OV-1
H
Change Management
SV-9, TV-2

Relevance of the Findings
While the TOGAF/DoDAF working group initially set forth to simply compare the two frameworks, their efforts additionally recognized that the frameworks were complimentary. What this means for architects today is that they can immediately use the TOGAF ADM to build DoDAF architectures, and, in doing so, leverage a more robust, comprehensive and complete enterprise architecture development method designed with business alignment in mind.

The working group also observed that both frameworks are currently dealing with potential gaps, such as support for service orientation. The organizations that maintain these different frameworks would benefit should they come together to harmonize their efforts and work on evolving their respective frameworks to deal with the gaps such as security viewpoints, Service Oriented Architectures, and Net-Centricity. For the architect, this ultimately means being better equipped to practice within a much broader space, which is a significant advantage in today’s competitive environment.

Conclusion
Each complex architecting endeavor requires several key elements in order to be successful: repeatable methodology, standardized output models, formal validation, governance, collaboration guidelines, configuration management, tools, and patterns. The architect is able to address many of these needs through the application of The Open Group’s Architecture Development Method as a disciplined process in developing the Department of Defense Architecture Framework set of views to model the architecture.

# # #

About the Authors
Dr. Fatma Dandashi is currently leading an Object Management Group (OMG) effort to define a UML profile for the DOD Architecture Framework. Prior to this activity she supported the development of Air Force Enterprise Architecture for SAF/XC. Dr. Dandashi was task lead on the MITRE development team responsible for DoD Architecture Framework Version 1.0 (Volumes I and II), and currently serves on the working group developing DoDAF Version 2.0.

Dr. Dandashi holds a Ph.D. in Information Technology from George Mason University, a Master of Science Degree in Computer Science from the University of Louisiana (Lafayette), and a Bachelor of Arts degree in Computers / Business Administration from the Lebanese American University.

Terence Blevins is Branch Chief and Lead Architect, Air Force Operational Support Enterprise Architecture, at Mitre. He supports the U.S. Air Force in the role of Branch Chief and Lead Architect of the Air Force Operational Support Enterprise Architecture.
Mr. Blevins has been involved with the architecture discipline since the 80s when he was at the NCR Corporation as Director of Strategic Architecture. He has been involved with evolving this discipline since 1996 when he first was introduced to The Open Group’s Architecture Forum. He was co-chair of the Architecture Forum and frequent contributor of content to TOGAF including the Business Scenario Method.

Mr. Blevins was previously Vice President and CIO of The Open Group where he contributed to The Open Group Vision of Boundaryless Information Flow. Mr. Blevins holds undergraduate and Masters degrees in Mathematics from Youngstown State University. He is TOGAF 8 certified.

Rolf Siegers is Raytheon’s Corporate Director of Architecture & Systems Integration and an Engineering Fellow. He joined Raytheon in 1984 and leads the Raytheon Enterprise Architecture Process (REAP) Initiative, a standards-based unification of several architecture frameworks and is Raytheon’s company-wide architecting process. Rolf also sits on Raytheon’s corporate Architecture Review Board (ARB), leading and supporting a variety of architecture-related initiatives.

Rolf’s program experience includes leading several multi-discipline software architecture teams for large-scale, software-intensive national and international systems since 1997. He is a certified TOGAF-8 architect (The Open Group), ATAM® Evaluator (SEI), and Software Architecture Professional (SEI). Rolf holds bachelor degrees in Computer Science and Mathematics from Huntingdon College and is a member of IEEE and INCOSE.

Judith Jones has served as an advisor to Brussels, CCTA and Industry Organizations on Enterprise Architecture and IS/IT Architecture and Frameworks, eGovernment, Practitioner of TOGAF, and Prince 2. Her background experience includes 10 years as an independent consultant and 20+ years as a business manager with ICL, now Fujitsu Services.
Judith is an experienced program manager and principal consultant with significant skills in customer-centric programs including Customer Relationship Management, Enterprise Architecture, Operational Business and IT Infrastructures. Her consulting experience includes business change, strategy development and communications, business architecture, business development and marketing, sales, strategy and partnership alignment, business re-engineering to change, specify and deliver customer value, process and commercial initiatives.

Judith is an extremely active member of The Open Group and has worked with their Architecture Forum to establish Enterprise Architecture development processes and strategies suitable for global government and private sector usage. She currently leads the TOGAF 9 development effort.

So Many Frameworks…So Little Time: What’s An Architect To Do?

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