Iteraplan

iteraplan
Stable release
5.4 / October 2016
Written in Java, JavaScript
Operating system platform independent
Website iteraplan.org

iteraplan is a simple effective tool to manage Enterprise architecture with focus on the IT landscape. The aim of iteraplan is to quickly introduce EAM into an organisation, enable tool support for managing the enterprise architecture and facilitate collaboration between different EA relevant stakeholders, such as enterprise architects, project managers, IT staff.

Features

With iteraplan different fields of enterprise architecture can be analysed. The focus not only lies on IT relevant parts, but the whole company is considered, like business architecture, information system architecture and technical architecture. The best practice meta-model is structured as follows.

After capturing the as-is state of the architecture, the desired to-be situation can be modelled. It is possible to develop different (e.g. sequential) to-be states. Furthermore, different graphical reports can be derived from iteraplan. For example, a portfolio- or information flow diagram, allocation tables or lists. All graphical reports can be configured to your needs and saved.

With the Excel or XMI import & export function data can be processed by other programs. A REST interface is available as well.

Licence

In addition to the free Lite Edition, there is also a paid Corporate Edition available with several additional features.[1]

History

The first version of the tool was developed in 2004 and used with customers of iteratec GmbH. The versions 1.0 up to 1.8 (mid of 2007) were only available as closed source.

At the beginning of 2008 iteraplan (now version 2.0) became the first open source EAM tool by providing a completely revised source code on SourceForge. It was released under the open source licence AGPL. Since then, iteraplan has received increasing attention, e.g. from companies like HUK-COBURG, Otto, VKB-Bank but also public authorities like Hamburg Port Authority.

In May 2008 the version 2.1 with fixed bugs and numerous new functions was released. In February 2009 the version 2.2 including many Refactorings was published. In May 2009 version 2.3 added plenty of comfort functions.

The next major update to version 3.0 in April 2012 introduced a clearer user interface based on Twitter Bootstrap. Moreover, the responsive web design enabled usage of iteraplan on smartphones and tablets.[2] The version 3.1 (July 2013) brought new functionality for life cycle management and roadmap planning as well as usability improvements.[3] The version 3.2 from October 2013 introduces a REST-Interface and improves the dashboard functionality and the visualizations.[4] Version 3.3 was developed with a focus on integration and ease of use.[5] In the version 3.4, the integration and especially the import and export has been improved and accelerated. From version 3.4 on the iteraplan source code is no longer available under AGPL-license.

With the current version 5 two major topics were covered: metamodel extensions and introduction of a new interactive client. With the new type " IT-Service " and numerous new relationships between existing types iteraplan 5 offers excellent opportunities to capture diverse IT landscapes. The new and innovative interaction client allows a much simpler EAM by combining visualization and maintenance of the data in a unique way. With version 5.0.5 of iteraplan the Graphics Reactor was introduced. Any customer-specific report or visualization can be created with the Graphics Reactor based on XSLT transformations. The releases 5.1 and 5.2 extends the new client introduced in release 5 and the visualizations contained therein significantly.

With the release 5.3 in August 2016 a plugin API was introduced, with which data calculations can be automated, amongst others. In addition, the Graphics Reactor has been extended so that up-to-date reports and visualizations can be provided to the whole organisation.[6] The release 5.4 adds three new diagrams to the interactive client, amongst other things.[7]

For the next years updates are scheduled for April and October. The company iteratec employs all active developers of this project and offers consulting, training and support, among other things.

System Requirements

Minimum Recommended
CPU 1 GHz Dual Core more is better
RAM 2 GB (with large models: more needed) 4 GB and more
HDD (excluding DB and OS) 250 MB 1 GB of free space
Operating System any OS supported by Java 7 or 8 (64 bit) especially Windows, Linux and MacOS X Windows 7, Server 2003/2008/2012 or newer
Linux (Suse's SLES, Red Hat's RHEL)
Runtime Environment Java SE Runtime Environment 7 Update 25 or 8 Update 65 (64 bit) by Oracle/SUN latest Update of Java SE 7 or 8 by Oracle/SUN (http://www.java.com)
Application Server Apache Tomcat 7.0.37 or 8.0.37 latest Apache Tomcat 8.0.x or 7.0.x
Database System MySQL 5.x, Oracle 10/11 or MS SQL Server 2012
Database Storage 10 MB (with large models: more needed) 100-200 MB

Literature

iteraplan in the press

References

External links

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