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Presentation to SD Best Practices September 28, 2005 Bob Roth (Sparx Systems) [email protected] Frank Truyen (Cephas Consulting) [email protected] Integrating UML 2.0 into Integrating UML 2.0 into Visual Studio Team System Visual Studio Team System

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Page 1: Detailed PowerPoint presentation

Presentation to SD Best Practices

September 28, 2005

Bob Roth (Sparx Systems)[email protected]

Frank Truyen (Cephas Consulting)[email protected]

Integrating UML 2.0 intoIntegrating UML 2.0 intoVisual Studio Team SystemVisual Studio Team System

Page 2: Detailed PowerPoint presentation

Overview

Sparx’s Mission Sparx’s Partnership with Microsoft Introduction to UML 2.0 Enterprise Architect 5.0 Features Introducing Enterprise Architect 6.0 Demonstration of EA & Visual Studio Integration

Requirements Model Use Case Model Domain Model Forward and Reverse Engineering into Visual Studio Leveraging the UML Model inside Visual Studio

Integration Roadmap with Visual Studio Team System Q&A

Page 3: Detailed PowerPoint presentation

Sparx’s MissionCreate a new paradigm for modeling and development tools by setting a price point that enables all members of the project team to benefit from their use.

Benefits include dramatic improvements in Documentation Traceability Collaboration Reusability Productivity Quality ROI

Page 4: Detailed PowerPoint presentation

Enterprise Architect Requirements UML

Visual Studio Code .NET

Sparx’s Partnership with Microsoft

Page 5: Detailed PowerPoint presentation

UML History in a Nutshell1

1 Based on chart on pg. 17 of http://www-cse.ucsd.edu/~ikrueger/Teaching_Documents/Winter_2005/UML_Intro_2005.pdf

Page 6: Detailed PowerPoint presentation

UML 2.0 A specification of the Object Management Group (OMG)

Sparx is a contributing member of the OMG Other important OMG standards include

The Meta-Object Facility (MOF) The XML Metadata Interchange (XMI) The Common Warehouse Metamodel (CWM) The Common Request Broker Architecture (CORBA)

Major goals of UML 2.0 Better alignment with other constituents of the OMG’s Model

Driven Architecture (MDA) initiative Clean up the underlying architecture by making it modular,

layered and extensible Expand the notation to support a wider set of the modeling

requirements

Page 7: Detailed PowerPoint presentation

UML 2.0 Diagram Types UML defines 13 types of diagrams, divided into two

categories: six represent static application structure and seven represent different aspects of dynamic behavior. Structural

• Class diagram• Object diagram• Component diagram• Composite Structure diagram• Deployment diagram• Package diagram

Behavioral• Use Case diagram• State Machine diagram• Activity diagram• Interaction diagrams

– Sequence diagram– Interaction Overview diagram– Communication diagram– Timing diagram

Page 8: Detailed PowerPoint presentation

Enterprise Architect 5.0 Features (1) UML 2.0 compliant, supporting all 13 diagrams Full development lifecycle coverage – from requirements to

analysis, design, testing, deployment and maintenance Forward and reverse engineering of multiple programming

languages including C#, C++ and Visual Basic Template based code generation scripts that can be

customized Forward and reverse engineering of database schemas (DDL)

for relational databases such as MS SQL Server, Oracle and others

XML Schema (XSD) forward generation Inbuilt requirements management with full traceability to the

realization elements (includes a powerful relationship matrix feature)

Page 9: Detailed PowerPoint presentation

Enterprise Architect 5.0 Features (2) Export & import of packages as XMI files for purposes such as

model backup, transfer between projects or version control Creation of model baselines (at the package branch level) as

compressed XMI files inside the EA repository Comparison of the structural aspects of models (at the

package level) against stored XMI representations Powerful WYSIWYG template based report generator in RTF

format HTML report generator Version control via links to external Configuration Management

systems XMI support for versions 1.0, 1.1 and 1.2 Support for managing tests at all levels (unit, integration,

system and acceptance)

Page 10: Detailed PowerPoint presentation

Enterprise Architect 5.0 Features (3) Built-in model-to-model (MDA) transformations

Customizable transformation templates for C#, Java, EJB Entity, EJB Session, DDL and XSD

Powerful scripting language for creating additional templates Import of binary modules

Java archives (.jar files) .NET assembly data PE files (.exe, .dll) Intermediate Language (.il) files

Tool extensibility using Model Driven Generator (MDG) Technologies Allows bundling of related resources such as UML profiles,

patterns, code templates, transformation templates, etc. Available MDG modelling extensions include CORBA, Python

and EJB Plug-in extensions to both Visual Studio .Net and

Eclipse (using MDG Technologies)

Page 11: Detailed PowerPoint presentation

EA Highlights - Model Repository Every aspect of the UML model—including graphical

data—is persisted in an industry-standard database in one of the following formats Native .EAP file (Microsoft Access/JET) RDBMS repository

• SQL Server / MSDE• MySQL• Oracle• PostgreSQL• Adaptive Server Anywhere

Provides scalability from a single user all the way up to very large teams

Permits common SQL reporting tools such as Crystal Reports to be used to manipulate and query the UML model, both from within EA and externally

Page 12: Detailed PowerPoint presentation

EA Highlights - Configuration Management

Supports versioning of packages and their nested sub-packages into a Configuration Management repository The repository is maintained by third-party version control

applications that control access and manage versions. Support for any version control system which is either CVS or

SCC compliant (e.g. Visual Source Safe, Clear Case, Accurev, Perforce and others).

All versioned packages are stored in standard XMI format for portability

Entire models can be reconstructed from a single root package using a “get all” feature

Check-in/check-out functionality is available from within EA Projects can be configured to load packages from multiple

version control repositories (and providers)

Page 13: Detailed PowerPoint presentation

EA Highlights - Project Management & Metrics EA provides “lightweight” project management support through

Project estimates  A comprehensive project estimation tool that calculates effort from use case and actor objects, coupled with project configurations defining the technical and environmental complexity of the work environment.

Resource management  Allows the project manager to assign resources directly to model elements and track progress over time.

Risk management  The Metrics and Estimations tool may be used to assign Risk to an element within a project. The interface allows the project manager to name the risk, define the type of risk, and give it a weighting.

Maintenance  Allows the Project Manager to assign and track maintenance related work items to elements within EA. This enables the rapid capture and record keeping of issues, changes, defects and tasks.

Page 14: Detailed PowerPoint presentation

EA Highlights - Advanced Capabilities Programmatically manipulate models using an automation

interface ActiveX and .NET technologies can be used to create add-ins

that can be easily plugged into EA Create UML profiles, and share these profiles as XML files

across teams and projects Commonly used profiles are available for download from the resources section of the Sparx website

Model the information (data) viewpoint using a built-in UML profile featuring tables, columns, keys, foreign keys and complex relationships

Develop user interfaces (mockups) using another built-in UML profile featuring screens and standard UI widgets

Leverage predefined analysis and design patterns (Gang of Four) or build your own from class diagrams

Page 15: Detailed PowerPoint presentation

EA Version 6.0 (Fall 2005) Live code generation Source compilation and debugging Integrated nUnit and jUnit support Perspectives to manage current user focus New MDG Technology extensions for

Systems Modeling Language (SysML - http://www.sysml.org/) Business Process Modeling Notation (BPMN - http://www.bpmn.org/)

Shape script language for deriving highly customisable shapes based on stereotypes and tagged values

Model discussions forum Advanced search facility MOF Meta-modelling support (import/export support for MOF 1.3,

MOF 1.4) XSD modelling (fwd & reverse engineering) WSDL SOA modelling support (forward and reverse engineering) Comprehensive model validation (including OCL-based constraints)

Page 16: Detailed PowerPoint presentation

Integrating UML 2.0 into theVisual Studio 2005 and VSTS environment

- Objectives - Provide the UML Analyst/Designer/Architect with the tools to build

detailed and precise UML 2.0 models Give the Visual Studio developer focused access to UML model

content Offer the development team strong traceability features, from

requirements to model, to code, to tests and finally to deployed artifacts

Increase productivity by linking UML models to Domain Specific Language (DSL) tools and artifacts

Release a preliminary (beta) version of the integration into Visual Studio 2005 by product launch date

Release a stable and complete version in early 2006 Make available a first version of the integration with Visual Studio

Team System by end of first quarter 2006

Page 17: Detailed PowerPoint presentation

Teaming up the UML Architect with the .Net Developer

Browse the EA model inside the Visual Studio environment The UML model is included as a Solution item within VS 2005.

Two additional tool views are made available• The UML Model window presents a Project View to navigate through

the EA model in order to view its entire content• The UML Property window provides a real-time view of model

diagrams and elements. Drill down into the model directly from the diagram elements

Invoke EA features from within Visual Studio Via the context menu of the class browser in VS the user can

• Select the “Open and Edit in EA” option to open EA with the class visible

• Update the properties of UML elements directly!• Open a selected diagram inside EA• Generate documentation, import libraries, etc.

Page 18: Detailed PowerPoint presentation

Teaming up the UML Architect with the .Net Developer

Navigate from UML artifacts to related VS elements Navigate from a UML class in the UML Project View window to

the source code item in the Solution Explorer or Class View Invoke the DSL Class Diagram from a UML class context

The Class Diagram is created automatically if it does not already exist. The corresponding VS class is highlighted in the Diagram

Automatically add the VS class to the Diagram if not present Invoke the DSL Application Diagram from a UML element

context The Application Diagram is created automatically if it does not

already exist The corresponding VS element is highlighted in the Diagram

Page 19: Detailed PowerPoint presentation

EA Integration with Visual StudioTeam System - Roadmap

VSTS user displays EA requirements Query and view in VSTS work items created in EA as

requirements EA user visualizes VSTS Work Items

Query and view in EA requirements, tasks, and other artifacts created as work items in VSTS, including any complex dependencies between work items

EA user leverages VSTS CM system Check-in or check-out files within EA using the VSTS

Configuration Management system

Page 20: Detailed PowerPoint presentation

EA Integration with Visual StudioTeam System - Roadmap

EA pre-populates a VS Application Diagram (AD) from a UML deployment diagram

EA renders VSTS test results on a UML diagram EA renders on a diagram test coverage data from the results

of the test suites executed in VSTS EA shows VSTS test case dependencies

EA visualizes the VSTS test cases and their dependencies on a UML diagram

Page 21: Detailed PowerPoint presentation

Summary EA – A full lifecycle, UML 2.0 tool with support for .NET

and other platforms Objective – to bring detailed, traceable UML Models to

all members of the .NET development team via Visual Studio and VSTS

Beta integration into Visual Studio 2005 by VS product launch date. Release in early 2006

Integration with Visual Studio Team System towards the end of first quarter 2006

Page 22: Detailed PowerPoint presentation

Q & A

Questions Suggestions Feedback

Please contact:

Bob Roth (Sparx Systems)[email protected]

orFrank Truyen (Cephas Consulting)

[email protected]