Difference between revisions of "Physical Architecture (glossary)"
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− | <blockquote> (1) ''A physical architecture is an arrangement of physical elements (system elements and physical interfaces) which provides the design solution for a product, service, or enterprise, and is intended to satisfy logical architecture elements and system requirements. It is implementable through technologies.'' </blockquote> | + | <blockquote>(1) ''A physical architecture is an arrangement of physical elements (system elements and physical interfaces) which provides the design solution for a product, service, or enterprise, and is intended to satisfy logical architecture elements and system requirements. It is implementable through technologies.'' (ISO/IEC 2010)</blockquote> |
− | <blockquote> (2) ''An arrangement of physical elements which provides the design solution for a consumer product or life-cycle process intended to satisfy the requirements of the functional architecture and the requirement baseline.'' | + | <blockquote>(2) ''An arrangement of physical elements which provides the design solution for a consumer product or life-cycle process intended to satisfy the requirements of the functional architecture and the requirement baseline.'' (ISO/IEC 2007)</blockquote> |
− | + | ===Source=== | |
− | (1) | + | (1) Adapted from ISO/IEC. 2010. ''Systems and Software Engineering, Part 1: Guide for Life Cycle Management''. Geneva, Switzerland: International Organization for Standardization (ISO)/International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC), ISO/IEC 24748-1:2010. |
− | (2) ISO/IEC. 2007. ''Systems and Software Engineering -- Recommended Practice for Architectural Description of Software-Intensive Systems''. Geneva, Switzerland: International Organization for Standards (ISO)/International | + | (2) ISO/IEC. 2007. ''Systems and Software Engineering -- Recommended Practice for Architectural Description of Software-Intensive Systems''. Geneva, Switzerland: International Organization for Standards (ISO)/International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC), ISO/IEC FDIS 42010:2007. |
===Discussion=== | ===Discussion=== | ||
− | Definition (1) comes from the terms "design architecture" provided in ISO/IEC/IEEE 24748 - 4 | + | Definition (1) comes from the terms "design architecture" provided in ISO/IEC/IEEE 24748 - 4. It is adapted here to be consistent current terminology, in particular with [[Logical Architecture (glossary) |logical architecture]]. |
Definition (2) comes from ISO/IEC/IEEE 42010:2007 that is replaced by version 2011 in which this definition has been withdrawn. | Definition (2) comes from ISO/IEC/IEEE 42010:2007 that is replaced by version 2011 in which this definition has been withdrawn. | ||
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+ | For a full discussion of the role and importance of physical architecture in systems engineering see the [[Physical Architecture Model Development]] article. | ||
[[Category:Glossary of Terms]] | [[Category:Glossary of Terms]] | ||
− | + | <center>'''SEBoK v. 2.9, released 20 November 2023'''</center> | |
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Latest revision as of 22:34, 18 November 2023
(1) A physical architecture is an arrangement of physical elements (system elements and physical interfaces) which provides the design solution for a product, service, or enterprise, and is intended to satisfy logical architecture elements and system requirements. It is implementable through technologies. (ISO/IEC 2010)
(2) An arrangement of physical elements which provides the design solution for a consumer product or life-cycle process intended to satisfy the requirements of the functional architecture and the requirement baseline. (ISO/IEC 2007)
Source
(1) Adapted from ISO/IEC. 2010. Systems and Software Engineering, Part 1: Guide for Life Cycle Management. Geneva, Switzerland: International Organization for Standardization (ISO)/International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC), ISO/IEC 24748-1:2010.
(2) ISO/IEC. 2007. Systems and Software Engineering -- Recommended Practice for Architectural Description of Software-Intensive Systems. Geneva, Switzerland: International Organization for Standards (ISO)/International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC), ISO/IEC FDIS 42010:2007.
Discussion
Definition (1) comes from the terms "design architecture" provided in ISO/IEC/IEEE 24748 - 4. It is adapted here to be consistent current terminology, in particular with logical architecture.
Definition (2) comes from ISO/IEC/IEEE 42010:2007 that is replaced by version 2011 in which this definition has been withdrawn.
For a full discussion of the role and importance of physical architecture in systems engineering see the Physical Architecture Model Development article.