Architecting automotive product lines: Industrial practice
Artikel i vetenskaplig tidskrift, 2013

This paper presents an in-depth view of how architects work with maintaining product line architectures at two internationally well-known automotive companies. The case study shows several interesting results. The process of managing architectural changes as well as the information the architects maintain and update is surprisingly similar between the two companies, despite that one has a strong line organisation and the other a strong project organisation. The architecting process found does not differ from what can be seen in other business domains. What does differ is that the architects studied see themselves interacting much more with other stakeholders than architects in general. The actual architectures are based on similar technology, e.g. CAN, but the network topology, S/W deployment and interfaces are totally different. The results indicate how the company’s different core values influence the architects when defining and maintaining the architectures over time. One company maintains four similar architectures in parallel, each at a different stage in their respective life-cycle, while the other has a single architecture for all products since 2002. The organisational belonging of the architects in the former company has been turbulent in contrast to the latter and there is some speculation if this is correlated.

Case study

Architecting

Process

Automotive industry

Författare

Ulrik Eklund

Volvo Cars

Håkan Gustavsson

Scania CV AB

Science of Computer Programming

0167-6423 (ISSN)

Vol. 78 12 2347-2359

Styrkeområden

Informations- och kommunikationsteknik

Ämneskategorier

Programvaruteknik

Inbäddad systemteknik

DOI

10.1016/j.scico.2012.06.008

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2019-11-29