Planning
(I am using this page to begin a discussion that I hope will become the development plan (and eventual budget) for the ESIP Exchange. As of now, these are the comments of one person. (Howard Burrows 18:09, 20 January 2006 (EST)) This plan is based on a book by Jim Conallen entitled "Building Web Applications with UML Second Edition". In addition, it adopts elements of the Federal Enterprise Architecture (see Guide to FEA and e-Gov Site).)
We will construct the ESIP exchange using a collection of interrelated "reference models" as employed by the US Government in the Federal Enterprise Architecture.
The most important aspects of our development strategy are shown on the left and right of Figure 1. Construction will be driven by the "business" of the Federation as described in our Federation Documents. The result will follow a component-based architecture.
In addition, we will be performance-driven and will design-to-test (DTT).
Developing the ESIP Exchange will involve a number of iterations through the following five steps:
Vision Document
The full vision document should list:
- Purpose
- Improved quality, use, and appreciation of Earth science
- Specify desired progress toward each Goal in Strategic Plan 2004-2007.
- Stakeholders (not just users)
- Primary: Foundation, Federation, Partners
- Secondary: Earth scientists, modelers, decision tool providers, decision makers, education
- Scope
- Incremental stages to desired end
- Components
- esipfed.org, GCMD, ECHO, GOS2, ESG, CLASS, NOMAD...
Requirements
- Glossary
- Functional Requirements
- Specify and prioritize elements from the various Federation Documents.
- Capture viewpoints of each of the various stakeholders.
- Nonfunctional Requirements
- Performance, Interoperability, Security, Hardware
- Use Cases
- Key scenarios that exemplify the functional and nonfunctional requirements
- Raise each scenario to a family of use cases
- Tests
- Each requirement will be defined in terms of a test that would show success
Analysis and Design
This step depends on the evolving requirements and will involve managers and the implementors: Atlantic BT, NGDC, ESRI, etc. Budget contingencies be part of the design documentation.
Implementation
This will involve staged implementation according to a sequencing plan recruiting already-existing components. We expect implementation to involve multiple components, each in their own separate implementation state.
Deployment
- Roll out and promotion
- All components are currently deployed with a variety of levels of use. Advertising and marketing the integrated ESIP Exchange will take place for targeted communities based on tests at each stage of integration involving sample audiences. We are essentially “Building our ship at sea”.
- Impact evaluation
- At each stage we will set benchmarks and targets and evaluate performance.
- Continual Redesign
- As the system evolves we expect both evolutionary and revolutionary changes involving coordination and support from initially independent components. We hope to move from aggregates to become and integrated “system” across components and knowledge environments.