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Practical Model-Driven Enterprise Architecture

You're reading from   Practical Model-Driven Enterprise Architecture Design a mature enterprise architecture repository using Sparx Systems Enterprise Architect and ArchiMate® 3.1

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2022
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781801076166
Length 412 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (2):
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Joe Williams Joe Williams
Author Profile Icon Joe Williams
Joe Williams
Mudar Bahri Mudar Bahri
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Mudar Bahri
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Toc

Table of Contents (16) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Enterprise Architecture with Sparx Enterprise Architect
2. Chapter 1: Enterprise Architecture and Its Practicality FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Introducing the Practice Scenarios 4. Section 2: Building the Enterprise Architecture Repository
5. Chapter 3: Kick-Starting Your Enterprise Architecture Repository 6. Chapter 4: Maintaining Quality and Consistency in the Repository 7. Chapter 5: Advanced Application Architecture Modeling 8. Chapter 6: Modeling in the Technology Layer 9. Chapter 7: Enterprise-Level Technology Architecture Models 10. Chapter 8: Business Architecture Models 11. Chapter 9: Modeling Strategy and Implementation 12. Section 3: Managing the Repository
13. Chapter 10: Operating the EA Repository 14. Chapter 11: Publishing Model Content 15. Other Books You May Enjoy

Sharing repositories

The most effective way to share repository access is to maintain your repository in a form that is easily shared – a relational database. Even if your repository is an .eap file on your desktop, it's already in a relational database. Sparx uses a JET database to store local repositories. While that's fine for local access, sharing repository access among five or more users is best accomplished using Oracle, Microsoft SQL Server, MySQL, or a similar database engine to house your repository on a shared remote server.

Sparx provides two ways to connect to such a remote repository:

  • Using a native database connection method
  • Via an HTTP server called Pro Cloud Server

There are benefits and drawbacks to either choice:

  • Connecting via the direct database connection is the fastest, but it requires a database user account for each user. It also requires that each user has network access to the server on which the database engine...
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