TOGAF Reference Models Flashcards
Foundation Architecture
An architecture of building blocks and corresponding standards that supports all the Common Systems Architectures, and, therefore, the complete computing environment.
The TOGAF TRM
Describes a fundamental architecture upon which other, more specific, architectures can be based.
Major characteristics of a Foundation Architecture
- It reflects general computing requirements
- It reflects general building blocks
- It defines technology standards for implementing these building blocks
- It provides direction for products and services
- It reflects the function of a complete, robust computing environment that can be used as a foundation
- It provides open system standards, directions, and recommendations
- It reflects directions and strategies
The TRM has two main components
- A taxonomy that defines terminology, and provides a coherent description of the components and conceptual structure of an information system
- A model, with an associated TRM graphic, that provides a visual representation of the taxonomy, as an aid to understanding
Integrated Information Infrastructure Reference Model
The III-RM is a reference model that focuses on the Application Software space and is a “Common Systems Architecture” in Enterprise Continuum terms
Integrated Information Infrastructure Reference Model
- Is fundamentally an Application Architecture reference model – a model of the application components and application services software essential for integrated information infrastructure.
- It includes information provider and consumer applications, as well as brokering applications
Boundaryless Information Flow
Is essentially the problem of getting information to the right people at the right time in a secure, reliable manner, in order to support the operations that are core to the extended enterprise.
The customer enterprise could gain significant operational efficiencies and improve the many different business processes of the enterprise – both internal processes, and those spanning the key interactions with suppliers, customers, and partners – if only it could provide staff with
- Integrated information so that different and potentially conflicting pieces of information are not distributed throughout different systems
- Integrated access to that information so that staff can access all the information they need and have a right to, through one convenient interface