For the purposes of TOGAF 9, the following terms and definitions apply. Supplementary Definitions should be referenced for supplementary definitions
not defined in this chapter.
Abstraction
The technique of providing summarized or generalized descriptions of detailed and complex content.
Abstraction, as in "level of abstraction", can also mean providing a focus for analysis that is concerned with a
consistent and common level of detail or abstraction. Abstraction in this sense is typically used in architecture to
allow a consistent level of definition and understanding to be achieved in each area of the architecture in order to
support effective communication and decision-making. It is especially useful when dealing with large and complex
architectures as it allows relevant issues to be identified before further detail is attempted.
Activity
A task or collection of tasks that support the functions of an organization. For example, a user entering data into an
IT system or traveling to visit customers.
Actor
A person, organization, or system that has a role that initiates or interacts with activities; for example, a sales
representative who travels to visit customers. Actors may be internal or external to an organization. In the automotive
industry, an original equipment manufacturer would be considered an actor by an automotive dealership that interacts
with its supply chain activities.
Application
A deployed and operational IT system that supports business functions and services; for example, a payroll.
Applications use data and are supported by multiple technology components but are distinct from the technology
components that support the application.
Application Architecture
A description of the major logical grouping of capabilities that manage the data objects necessary to process the data
and support the business.
-
Note:
-
Application Architecture is described in Part II, Phase C:
Information Systems Architectures - Application Architecture .
Application Platform
The collection of technology components of hardware and software that provide the services used to support
applications.
Application Platform Interface (API)
The interface, or set of functions, between application software and/or the application platform.
Architectural Style
The combination of distinctive features in which architecture is performed or expressed.
Architecture
-
A formal description of a system, or a detailed plan of the system at component level, to guide its implementation
(source: ISO/IEC 42010:2007).
-
The structure of components, their inter-relationships, and the principles and guidelines governing their design
and evolution over time.
Architecture Building Block (ABB)
A constituent of the architecture model that describes a single aspect of the overall model.
See also Building Block.
Architecture Continuum
A part of the Enterprise Continuum. A repository of architectural elements with increasing detail and specialization.
This Continuum begins with foundational definitions like reference models, core strategies, and basic building blocks.
From there it spans to Industry Architectures and all the way to an organization's specific architecture.
See also Enterprise Continuum.
Architecture Development Method (ADM)
The core of TOGAF. A step-by-step approach to develop and use an enterprise architecture.
-
Note:
-
The ADM is described in ADM Introduction
Architecture Domain
The architectural area being considered. There are four architecture domains within TOGAF: business, data, application,
and technology.
Architecture Framework
A foundational structure, or set of structures, which can be used for developing a broad range of different
architectures. It should contain 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.
Architecture Governance
The practice and orientation by which enterprise architectures and other architectures are managed and controlled at an
enterprise-wide level. It is concerned with change processes (design governance) and operation of product systems
(operational governance).
See also Governance.
Architecture Landscape
The architectural representation of assets deployed within the operating enterprise at a particular point in time. The
views are segmented into strategic, segment, and capability levels of abstraction to meet diverse stakeholder needs.
Architecture Principles
A qualitative statement of intent that should be met by the architecture. Has at least a supporting rationale and a
measure of importance.
-
Note:
-
A sample set of architecture principles is defined in Architecture Principles.
Architecture View
See View.
Architecture Vision
-
A high-level, aspirational view of the Target Architecture.
-
A phase in the ADM which delivers understanding and definition of the Architecture Vision.
-
A specific deliverable describing the Architecture Vision.
-
Note:
-
Phase A (Architecture Vision) is described in Architecture Vision.
Artifact
An architectural work product that describes an architecture from a specific viewpoint. Examples include a network
diagram, a server specification, a use-case specification, a list of architectural requirements, and a business
interaction matrix. Artifacts are generally classified as catalogs (lists of things), matrices (showing relationships
between things), and diagrams (pictures of things). An architectural deliverable may contain multiple artifacts and
artifacts will form the content of the Architecture Repository.
See also Building Block.
Baseline
A specification that has been formally reviewed and agreed upon, that thereafter serves as the basis for further
development or change and that can be changed only through formal change control procedures or a type of procedure such
as configuration management.
Baseline Architecture
The existing defined system architecture before entering a cycle of architecture review and redesign.
Boundaryless Information Flow
-
A trademark of The Open Group.
-
A shorthand representation of "access to integrated information to support business process improvements"
representing a desired state of an enterprise's infrastructure specific to the business needs of the organization.
An infrastructure that provides Boundaryless Information Flow has open standard components that provide services in a
customer's extended enterprise that:
-
Combine multiple sources of information
-
Securely deliver the information whenever and wherever it is needed, in the right context for the people or systems
using that information.
-
Note:
-
The need for Boundaryless Information Flow is described in IIIRM.
Building Block
Represents a (potentially re-usable) component of business, IT, or architectural capability that can be combined with
other building blocks to deliver architectures and solutions.
Building blocks can be defined at various levels of detail, depending on what stage of architecture development has
been reached. For instance, at an early stage, a building block can simply consist of a name or an outline description.
Later on, a building block may be decomposed into multiple supporting building blocks and may be accompanied by a full
specification. Building blocks can relate to "architectures" or "solutions".
See also Artifact.
-
Note:
-
Building blocks are described in Building Blocks.
Business Architecture
The business strategy, governance, organization, and key business processes information, as well as the interaction
between these concepts.
-
Note:
-
Business Architecture is described in Business Architecture.
Business Domain
A grouping of coherent business functions and activities (in the context of a business sector) over which meaningful
responsibility can be taken. For example, Finance, Human Resources (HR), Automobile Manufacturing, Retail, etc. The
phrase is often used to identify specific business knowledge (a business domain expert).
Business Function
Delivers business capabilities closely aligned to an organization, but not necessarily explicitly governed by the
organization.
Business Governance
Concerned with ensuring that the business processes and policies (and their operation) deliver the business outcomes
and adhere to relevant business regulation.
Business Service
Supports business capabilities through an explicitly defined interface and is explicitly governed by an organization.
Capability
An ability that an organization, person, or system possesses. Capabilities are typically expressed in general and
high-level terms and typically require a combination of organization, people, processes, and technology to achieve. For
example, marketing, customer contact, or outbound telemarketing.
Capability Architecture
A highly detailed description of the architectural approach to realize a particular solution or solution aspect.
Capability Increment
The output from a business change initiative that delivers an increase in performance for a particular capability of
the enterprise.
Communications and Stakeholder Management
The management of needs of stakeholders of the enterprise architecture practice. It also manages the execution of
communication between the practice and the stakeholders and the practice and the consumers of its services.
-
Note:
-
Architecture stakeholder management is described in Stakeholder Management.
Concerns
The key interests that are crucially important to the stakeholders in a system, and determine the acceptability of the
system. Concerns may pertain to any aspect of the system's functioning, development, or operation, including
considerations such as performance, reliability, security, distribution, and evolvability.
See also Stakeholder.
Constraint
An external factor that prevents an organization from pursuing particular approaches to meet its goals. For example,
customer data is not harmonized within the organization, regionally or nationally, constraining the organization's
ability to offer effective customer service.
Data Architecture
The structure of an organization's logical and physical data assets and data management resources.
-
Note:
-
Data Architecture is described in Information Systems: Data.
Deliverable
An architectural work product that is contractually specified and in turn formally reviewed, agreed, and signed off by
the stakeholders. Deliverables represent the output of projects and those deliverables that are in documentation form
will typically be archived at completion of a project, or transitioned into an Architecture Repository as a reference
model, standard, or snapshot of the Architecture Landscape at a point in time.
Enterprise
The highest level (typically) of description of an organization and typically covers all missions and functions. An
enterprise will often span multiple organizations.
Enterprise Continuum
A categorization mechanism useful for classifying architecture and solution artifacts, both internal and external to
the Architecture Repository, as they evolve from generic Foundation Architectures to Organization-Specific
Architectures.
See also Architecture Continuum and Solutions Continuum.
Environment Management
The provision and management of the environment required to support the operations of the enterprise architecture
practice, including facilities, equipment, tools, and information systems.
Financial Management
The management of the financial aspects of the enterprise architecture practice; e.g., budgeting and forecasting.
Foundation Architecture
An architecture of generic services and functions that provides a foundation on which more specific architectures and
architectural components can be built. The TOGAF Foundation Architecture includes a Technical Reference Model (TRM).
Framework
A structure for content or process that can be used as a tool to structure thinking, ensuring consistency and
completeness.
Gap
A statement of difference between two states. Used in the context of gap analysis, where the difference between the
Baseline and Target Architecture is identified.
-
Note:
-
Gap analysis is described in Gap Analysis.
Governance
The discipline of monitoring, managing, and steering a business (or IS/IT landscape) to deliver the business outcome
required.
See also Architecture Governance, Business Governance, and Operational
Governance in Supplementary Definitions.
Information
Any communication or representation of facts, data, or opinions, in any medium or form, including textual, numerical,
graphic, cartographic, narrative, or audio-visual forms.
Information Technology (IT)
-
The lifecycle management of information and related technology used by an organization.
-
An umbrella term that includes all or some of the subject areas relating to the computer industry, such as Business
Continuity, Business IT Interface, Business Process Modeling and Management, Communication, Compliance and
Legislation, Computers, Content Management, Hardware, Information Management, Internet, Offshoring, Networking,
Programming and Software, Professional Issues, Project Management, Security, Standards, Storage, Voice and Data
Communications. Various countries and industries employ other umbrella terms to describe this same collection.
-
A term commonly assigned to a department within an organization tasked with provisioning some or all of the domains
described in (2) above.
-
Alternate names commonly adopted include Information Services, Information Management, et al.
Interoperability
-
The ability to share information and services.
-
The ability of two or more systems or components to exchange and use information.
-
The ability of systems to provide and receive services from other systems and to use the services so interchanged
to enable them to operate effectively together.
Knowledge
The awareness and understanding of facts, truths, or information gained in the form of experience or learning (a
posteriori), or through introspection (a priori). Knowledge is an appreciation of the possession of
interconnected details which, in isolation, are of lesser value.
Logical
An implementation-independent definition of the architecture, often grouping related physical entities according to
their purpose and structure. For example, the products from multiple infrastructure software vendors can all be
logically grouped as Java application server platforms.
Metadata
Data about data, of any sort in any media, that describes the characteristics of an entity.
Metamodel
A model that describes how and with what the architecture will be described in a structured way.
Method
A defined, repeatable approach to address a particular type of problem.
See also Methodology.
Methodology
A defined, repeatable series of steps to address a particular type of problem, which typically centers on a defined
process, but may also include definition of content.
See also Method.
Model
A representation of a subject of interest. A model provides a smaller scale, simplified, and/or abstract representation
of the subject matter. A model is constructed as a "means to an end". In the context of enterprise architecture, the
subject matter is a whole or part of the enterprise and the end is the ability to construct "views" that address the
concerns of particular stakeholders; i.e., their "viewpoints" in relation to the subject matter.
See also Stakeholder, View, and Viewpoint.
Modeling
A technique through construction of models which enables a subject to be represented in a form that enables reasoning,
insight, and clarity concerning the essence of the subject matter.
Objective
A time-bounded milestone for an organization used to demonstrate progress towards a goal; for example, "Increase
Capacity Utilization by 30% by the end of 2009 to support the planned increase in market share".
Organization
A self-contained unit of resources with line management responsibility, goals, objectives, and measures. Organizations
may include external parties and business partner organizations.
Patterns
A technique for putting building blocks into context; for example, to describe a re-usable solution to a problem.
Building blocks are what you use: patterns can tell you how you use them, when, why, and what trade-offs you have to
make in doing so.
See also Building Block.
Performance Management
The monitoring, control, and reporting of the enterprise architecture practice performance. Also concerned with
continuous improvement.
Physical
A description of a real-world entity. Physical elements in an enterprise architecture may still be considerably
abstracted from Solution Architecture, design, or implementation views.
Platform
A combination of technology infrastructure products and components that provides that pre-requisites to host
application software.
Platform Services
A technical capability required to provide enabling infrastructure that supports the delivery of applications.
Principle
See Architecture Principles.
Quality Management
The management of the quality aspects of the enterprise architecture practice; e.g., management plans, quality
criteria, review processes.
Reference Model (RM)
A reference model is an abstract framework for understanding significant relationships among the entities of [an]
environment, and for the development of consistent standards or specifications supporting that environment. A reference
model is based on a small number of unifying concepts and may be used as a basis for education and explaining standards
to a non-specialist. A reference model is not directly tied to any standards, technologies, or other concrete
implementation details, but it does seek to provide common semantics that can be used unambiguously across and between
different implementations.
-
Note:
-
The source of this definition is OASIS; refer to www.oasis-open.org/committees/tc_home.php?wg_abbrev=soa-rm.
Repository
A system that manages all of the data of an enterprise, including data and process models and other enterprise
information. Hence, the data in a repository is much more extensive than that in a data dictionary, which generally
defines only the data making up a database.
Requirement
A quantitative statement of business need that must be met by a particular architecture or work package.
Resource Management
The acquisition, development, and management of human resources within the enterprise architecture practice in response
to demand for enterprise architecture services and financial constraints.
-
Note:
-
The Architecture Skills Framework is described in Architecture Skills Framework.
Roadmap
An abstracted plan for business or technology change, typically operating across multiple disciplines over multiple
years. Normally used in the phrases Technology Roadmap, Architecture Roadmap, etc.
Role
-
The usual or expected function of an actor, or the part somebody or something plays in a particular action or
event. An Actor may have a number of roles.
-
The part an individual plays in an organization and the contribution they make through the application of their
skills, knowledge, experience, and abilities.
See also Actor.
Segment Architecture
A detailed, formal description of areas within an enterprise, used at the program or portfolio level to organize and
align change activity.
See also Strategic Architecture.
Service Management
The management of the execution and performance of the enterprise architecture practice services. This includes
managing the "pipeline" plus current service portfolio.
Service Orientation
A way of thinking in terms of services and service-based development and the outcomes of services.
See also Service Oriented Architecture (SOA).
Service Oriented Architecture (SOA)
An architectural style that supports service orientation. It has the following distinctive features:
-
It is based on the design of the services - which mirror real-world business activities - comprising the enterprise
(or inter-enterprise) business processes.
-
Service representation utilizes business descriptions to provide context (i.e., business process, goal, rule,
policy, service interface, and service component) and implements services using service orchestration.
-
It places unique requirements on the infrastructure - it is recommended that implementations use open standards to
realize interoperability and location transparency.
-
Implementations are environment-specific - they are constrained or enabled by context and must be described within
that context.
-
It requires strong governance of service representation and implementation.
-
It requires a "Litmus Test", which determines a "good service".
See also Architectural Style and Service Orientation.
Skill
The ability to perform a job-related activity, which contributes to the effective performance of a task.
Solution Architecture
A description of a discrete and focused business operation or activity and how IS/IT supports that operation. A
Solution Architecture typically applies to a single project or project release, assisting in the translation of
requirements into a solution vision, high-level business and/or IT system specifications, and a portfolio of
implementation tasks.
Solution Building Block (SBB)
A candidate physical solution for an Architecture Building Block (ABB); e.g., a Commercial Off-The-Shelf (COTS)
package, that is a component of the Acquirer view of the architecture.
Solutions Continuum
A part of the Enterprise Continuum. A repository of re-usable solutions for future implementation efforts. It contains
implementations of the corresponding definitions in the Architecture Continuum.
See also Enterprise Continuum and Architecture Continuum.
Stakeholder
An individual, team, or organization (or classes thereof) with interests in, or concerns relative to, the outcome of
the architecture. Different stakeholders with different roles will have different concerns.
See also System Stakeholder in Supplementary Definitions.
Standards Information Base (SIB)
A database of standards that can be used to define the particular services and other components of an
Organization-Specific Architecture.
-
Note:
-
The Standards Information Base is described in Architecture Repository.
Strategic Architecture
A summary formal description of the enterprise, providing an organizing framework for operational and change activity,
and an executive-level, long-term view for direction setting.
Target Architecture
The description of a future state of the architecture being developed for an organization. There may be several future
states developed as a roadmap to show the evolution of the architecture to a target state.
Taxonomy of Architecture Views
The organized collection of all views pertinent to an architecture.
Technical Reference Model (TRM)
A structure which allows components of an information system to be described in a consistent manner (i.e., the way in
which you describe the components).
See also Reference Model (RM).
Technology Architecture
The logical software and hardware capabilities that are required to support deployment of business, data, and
application services. This includes IT infrastructure, middleware, networks, communications, processing, and standards.
-
Note:
-
Technology Architecture is described in Technology Architecture.
Transition Architecture
A formal description of the enterprise architecture showing periods of transition and development for particular parts
of the enterprise. Transition Architectures are used to provide an overview of current and target capability and allow
for individual work packages and projects to be grouped into managed portfolios and programs.
-
Note:
-
Transition Architectures are described in Overview of Architecture Deliverables.
View
The representation of a related set of concerns. A view is what is seen from a viewpoint. An architecture view may be
represented by a model to demonstrate to stakeholders their areas of interest in the architecture. A view does not have
to be visual or graphical in nature.
See also Stakeholder and Viewpoint.
Viewpoint
A definition of the perspective from which a view is taken. It is a specification of the conventions for constructing
and using a view (often by means of an appropriate schema or template). A view is what you see; a viewpoint is where
you are looking from - the vantage point or perspective that determines what you see.
See also Metaview in Supplementary Definitions.
Work Package
A set of actions identified to achieve one or more objectives for the business. A work package can be a part of a
project, a complete project, or a program.
|