Why does metamodeling recently get so much attention?

We can only speculate, but here are some commonly mentioned reasons:

  • Its time has come.

    Metamodeling has been around at least since the late 1980s, but with the advent of the Internet and business integration, data integration is obviously a first-order priority. Metamodels are the foundation for data integration, even if they are not always called metamodels.

  • The advent of metamodel-driven software packages.

    The first metamodel-driven software packages were CASE tools (aka modeling tools) with an extensible, or fully configurable metamodel. In the latter case they are often called Meta-CASE tools. This allowed user organizations to customize software development methodologies, or industry standards, and their supporting modeling constructs.

    Now metamodel-driven software is under the hood in many places, such as e-business integration suites.

  • The increasing availability of metamodel-driven technologies and standards.

    The most famous example in this respect may be the Unified Modeling Language (UML), which is (mostly) defined in terms of a metamodel. The UML was not the first, however: previous efforts included CDIF (CASE tool interoperability based on an Integrated Meta-model), PCTE and IRDS (both repository standards), STEP (industrial information exchange) and others.

  • The need to raise the abstraction level.

    Metamodels are very good at abstracting from lower-level details of integration and interoperability, and helping with partitioning problems into orthogonal sub-problems of conceptual data, physical data optimization, and control flow. In this respect, metamodels are an ideal helper for complex web services related projects.

原文地址:https://www.cnblogs.com/taowen/p/12828.html