Legacy systems: managing evolution through integration in a distributed and object-oriented computing environment.
- 1 January 1995
- journal article
- p. 132-6
Abstract
Legacy systems are crucial for organizations since they support key functionalities. But they become obsolete with aging and the apparition of new techniques. Managing their evolution is a key issue in software engineering. This paper presents a strategy that has been developed at Broussais University Hospital in Paris to make a legacy system devoted to the management of health care units evolve towards a new up-to-date software. A two-phase evolution pathway is described. The first phase consists in separating the interface from the data storage and application control and in using a communication channel between the individualized components. The second phase proposes to use an object-oriented DBMS in place of the homegrown system. An application example for the management of hypertensive patients is described.This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- Changes in health care: challenges for information system designInternational Journal of Bio-Medical Computing, 1995
- A reuse oriented Development Database: the HELIOS Object Information System.1994
- The HELIOS Unification Bus: a toolbox to develop client/server applications.1994
- Usability and efficiency. The HELIOS approach to development of user interfaces.1994
- HERMES: a health care workstation integration architectureInternational Journal of Bio-Medical Computing, 1994
- Using a meta-model to build a connection service in an object oriented medical application development environment.1994