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20050726 Tuesday July 26, 2005

What do the ARCs do?

What is it that we expect the ARCs to do?

The ARCs attempt to maximize the effective output of all developers. Some of the ways it does this are

Goals of the ARC process's interactions with the products being developed:

The ARCs do this by reviewing the proposed changes to components. These changes need to be proactively understood and committed to by the community before they are integrated into the codebase. The scope and level of such reviews obviously will vary in relationship to the impact of the change, with simple bugfixes getting the least attention and complex feature additions or changes getting the most.

( Jul 26 2005, 04:16:46 PM PDT ) Permalink Comments [0]

20050714 Thursday July 14, 2005

What is an ARC?

The Architecture Review Committees (ARCs) are responsible for the architecture process at Sun. The "Systems Architecture" effort at Sun is a process that establishes the basis for multiple engineering projects to be developed in parallel and then to integrate with each other and the existing system, either at Sun or in the customer's hands.

Sun's Architecture Review Committees (ARCs) review and approve technical aspects of software projects, implementing a process to manage technical change in the architecture of our software systems. These architectural reviews:

The goal of the ARC process is to consistently fulfill our customers' expectations of what a Sun product is, across the product line and over generations of products.

( Jul 14 2005, 03:15:00 PM PDT ) Permalink Comments [0]

Reusable components

This is part of a discussion I'm having on the opensolaris-arc mailing list...

One of the recurring problems that we try to manage at Sun is how to effectively reuse components that should be reusable.

Reused components add risk to complex systems, primarily because incompatible changes to a component will break other parts of the system.

The FOSS/distro world many times deals with this situation by resyncing and recompiling whole subsystems every time some component revs in an incompatible way, giving what I call "source level compatability". Think gentoo and autoconf.

The alternative chosen by Sun and others is to provide "binary compatability", even in the face of incompatible change. This requires that we worry a lot more about changes to the interfaces between components:

As long as these components are not reused by anything else in the system, it is easy to "not care" about how they evolve or change. The collection (which we call a "consolidation") is both low-risk and low-maintenance.

As these components start to get reused as building blocks for other consolidations, the potential cost to the system increases. If a component changes in an incompatible way, all the things that depend on it will need to react; if they don't, things may/will break.

The architectural question here really comes directly from kindergarten: "does it play well with others?"

( Jul 14 2005, 02:40:00 PM PDT ) Permalink Comments [0]


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