Journal article 729 views
Sustainable software engineering: Reflections on advances in research and practice
Colin C. Venters ,
Rafael Capilla ,
Elisa Yumi Nakagawa ,
Stefanie Betz ,
Birgit Penzenstadler ,
Tom Crick ,
Ian Brooks
Information and Software Technology, Volume: 164, Start page: 107316
Swansea University Author: Tom Crick
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DOI (Published version): 10.1016/j.infsof.2023.107316
Abstract
Context: Modern societies are highly dependent on complex, large-scale, software-intensive systems that increasingly operate within an environment of continuous availability, which are challenging to maintain, and evolve in response to changes in stakeholder requirements of the system. Software arch...
Published in: | Information and Software Technology |
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ISSN: | 0950-5849 1873-6025 |
Published: |
Elsevier BV
2023
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URI: | https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa64068 |
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2023-08-11T11:23:16Z |
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2024-11-25T14:13:23Z |
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Their sustainability – the capacity to endure in changing environments – is a critical concern for software architecture research and practice. Objective: The objective of the paper is to re-examine our previous assumptions and arguments in light of advances in the field. This reflection paper provides an opportunity to obtain new insights into the trends in software sustainability in both academia and industry, from a software architecture perspective specifically and software engineering more broadly. Given advances in research in the field, the increasing introduction of academic courses on different sustainability topics, and the engagement of companies to cope with sustainability goals, we reflect on advances and maturity about the role sustainability in general plays in today’s society. More specifically, we revisit the trends, open issues and research challenges identified five years ago in our previous paper on software sustainability research and practice from a software architecture viewpoint, which aimed to provide a foundation and roadmap of emerging research themes in the area of sustainable software architectures in order to consider how this paper influenced and motivated research in the intervening years. Method: The forward snowballing method was used to establish the methodological basis for our reflection on the state of the art. A total of 234 studies were identified between April 2018 and June 2023 and 102 studies were found to be relevant according to the selection criteria. A further subset was mapped to the primary themes of the original paper including definitions and concepts, reference architectures, measures and metrics, and education. 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2024-04-08T20:40:59.8222502 v2 64068 2023-08-11 Sustainable software engineering: Reflections on advances in research and practice 200c66ef0fc55391f736f6e926fb4b99 0000-0001-5196-9389 Tom Crick Tom Crick true false 2023-08-11 SOSS Context: Modern societies are highly dependent on complex, large-scale, software-intensive systems that increasingly operate within an environment of continuous availability, which are challenging to maintain, and evolve in response to changes in stakeholder requirements of the system. Software architectures are the foundation of any software system and provide a mechanism for reasoning about core software quality requirements. Their sustainability – the capacity to endure in changing environments – is a critical concern for software architecture research and practice. Objective: The objective of the paper is to re-examine our previous assumptions and arguments in light of advances in the field. This reflection paper provides an opportunity to obtain new insights into the trends in software sustainability in both academia and industry, from a software architecture perspective specifically and software engineering more broadly. Given advances in research in the field, the increasing introduction of academic courses on different sustainability topics, and the engagement of companies to cope with sustainability goals, we reflect on advances and maturity about the role sustainability in general plays in today’s society. More specifically, we revisit the trends, open issues and research challenges identified five years ago in our previous paper on software sustainability research and practice from a software architecture viewpoint, which aimed to provide a foundation and roadmap of emerging research themes in the area of sustainable software architectures in order to consider how this paper influenced and motivated research in the intervening years. Method: The forward snowballing method was used to establish the methodological basis for our reflection on the state of the art. A total of 234 studies were identified between April 2018 and June 2023 and 102 studies were found to be relevant according to the selection criteria. A further subset was mapped to the primary themes of the original paper including definitions and concepts, reference architectures, measures and metrics, and education. Vision: The vision of this reflection paper is to provide a new foundation and road map of emerging research themes in the area of sustainable software engineering highlighting recent trends, and open issues and research challenges. Journal Article Information and Software Technology 164 107316 Elsevier BV 0950-5849 1873-6025 Architectural debt, Architectural smells, Code smells, Education and training, Reference architectures, Software architecture, Software engineering, Software metrics, Software sustainability, Sustainability, Sustainable software, Technical debt 1 12 2023 2023-12-01 10.1016/j.infsof.2023.107316 COLLEGE NANME Social Sciences School COLLEGE CODE SOSS Swansea University 2024-04-08T20:40:59.8222502 2023-08-11T12:18:10.3874440 Faculty of Science and Engineering School of Mathematics and Computer Science - Computer Science Colin C. Venters 0000-0001-8664-9107 1 Rafael Capilla 0000-0002-6943-1285 2 Elisa Yumi Nakagawa 0000-0002-7754-4298 3 Stefanie Betz 0000-0002-3613-5893 4 Birgit Penzenstadler 0000-0002-5771-0455 5 Tom Crick 0000-0001-5196-9389 6 Ian Brooks 0000-0002-6227-327x 7 |
title |
Sustainable software engineering: Reflections on advances in research and practice |
spellingShingle |
Sustainable software engineering: Reflections on advances in research and practice Tom Crick |
title_short |
Sustainable software engineering: Reflections on advances in research and practice |
title_full |
Sustainable software engineering: Reflections on advances in research and practice |
title_fullStr |
Sustainable software engineering: Reflections on advances in research and practice |
title_full_unstemmed |
Sustainable software engineering: Reflections on advances in research and practice |
title_sort |
Sustainable software engineering: Reflections on advances in research and practice |
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200c66ef0fc55391f736f6e926fb4b99 |
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200c66ef0fc55391f736f6e926fb4b99_***_Tom Crick |
author |
Tom Crick |
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Colin C. Venters Rafael Capilla Elisa Yumi Nakagawa Stefanie Betz Birgit Penzenstadler Tom Crick Ian Brooks |
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Information and Software Technology |
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10.1016/j.infsof.2023.107316 |
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Elsevier BV |
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Faculty of Science and Engineering |
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Context: Modern societies are highly dependent on complex, large-scale, software-intensive systems that increasingly operate within an environment of continuous availability, which are challenging to maintain, and evolve in response to changes in stakeholder requirements of the system. Software architectures are the foundation of any software system and provide a mechanism for reasoning about core software quality requirements. Their sustainability – the capacity to endure in changing environments – is a critical concern for software architecture research and practice. Objective: The objective of the paper is to re-examine our previous assumptions and arguments in light of advances in the field. This reflection paper provides an opportunity to obtain new insights into the trends in software sustainability in both academia and industry, from a software architecture perspective specifically and software engineering more broadly. Given advances in research in the field, the increasing introduction of academic courses on different sustainability topics, and the engagement of companies to cope with sustainability goals, we reflect on advances and maturity about the role sustainability in general plays in today’s society. More specifically, we revisit the trends, open issues and research challenges identified five years ago in our previous paper on software sustainability research and practice from a software architecture viewpoint, which aimed to provide a foundation and roadmap of emerging research themes in the area of sustainable software architectures in order to consider how this paper influenced and motivated research in the intervening years. Method: The forward snowballing method was used to establish the methodological basis for our reflection on the state of the art. A total of 234 studies were identified between April 2018 and June 2023 and 102 studies were found to be relevant according to the selection criteria. A further subset was mapped to the primary themes of the original paper including definitions and concepts, reference architectures, measures and metrics, and education. Vision: The vision of this reflection paper is to provide a new foundation and road map of emerging research themes in the area of sustainable software engineering highlighting recent trends, and open issues and research challenges. |
published_date |
2023-12-01T02:41:24Z |
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11.04748 |