Name | Description |
---|---|
A | |
![]() |
The ArchiMate Enterprise Architecture modeling language is a visual language with a set of default iconography for describing, analyzing, and communicating many concerns of Enterprise Architectures as they change over time. The standard provides a set of entities and relationships with their corresponding iconography for the representation of Architecture Descriptions. The ArchiMate ecosystem also supports an exchange format in XML which allows model and diagram exchange between tools. The following diagrams provide a mapping of ArchiMate concepts to SysFEAT concepts.
|
B | |
![]() |
Mapping of the OMG BMM metamodel with SysFEAT Concepts.
|
C | |
![]() |
The C4 model graphical notation technique for modelling the architecture of software systems. created by the software architect Simon Brown. C4 model provides a way for software development teams to efficiently and effectively communicate their software architecture, at different levels of detail, telling different stories to different types of audience, when doing up front design or retrospectively documenting an existing codebase. |
D | |
![]() |
Mapping of Dodaf 2 concepts (DM2) to SysFEAT concepts. SysFEAT has a broader set of concepts than DM2 as it also covers the larger scope of Enterprise Architecture, IT Architecture, IT Asset Management, Information Architecture and Operational Assurance. |
O | |
![]() |
KerML is a foundational modeling language provided by the OMG for expressing various kinds of system models with consistent semantics. |
T | |
![]() |
Mapping of core concepts of the TOGAF Content Metamodel to SysFEAT concepts. |
U | |
![]() |
UAF evolved from the Unified Profile for DoDAF and MODAF (UPDM), version 2.1. UAF extends the scope of UPDM and generalizes it to make it applicable to commercial as well as military architectures. The intent of UAF is to provide a standard representation for describing enterprise architectures using a Model Based Systems Engineering (MBSE) approach. The core concepts in the UAF are based upon the DoDAF 2.0.2 Domain Metamodel (DM2) and the MODAF ontological data exchange mechanism (MODEM), Security Views from Canada's Department of National Defense Architecture Framework (DNDAF) and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) Architecture Framework (NAF) v 4. The following diagrams provide a mapping of UAF concepts to SysFEAT concepts. As SysFEAT goes beyond MBSE, it provides a broder set of concepts than UAF to cover the entire spectrum of Enterprise Architecture. This includes IT Architecture, IT Asset Management, Information Architecture and GRC. The mapping provides a comprehensive understanding of UAF Domain Metamodel concepts (DMM) in SEAMF as well as correspondance between UAF and SysFEAT terminologies.
|
![]() |
The Unified Foundational Ontology (UFO) is a foundational ontology that provides a structured, philosophically grounded framework for conceptual modeling, knowledge representation, and semantic interoperability. It integrates insights from formal ontology, philosophy of language, cognitive science, and linguistics, and is organized into three main parts: 1) UFO-A (dealing with endurants, events, qualities, and their relationships, based on a formal theory of objects and universals), 2) UFO-B (a foundational ontology of events and processes), 3) UFO-C (covering social entities such as agents, roles, norms, and institutions). By offering a coherent set of categories and relations, UFO supports the analysis, design, and evaluation of conceptual models across domains, promoting clarity, reusability, and ontological consistency. |