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Provenance of this page
Ontology Specification Draft

[Ontology Name]: Overview back to ToC

This ontology has the following classes and properties.

Named Individuals

Cross-reference for [Ontology Name] classes, object properties and data properties back to ToC

This section provides details for each class and property defined by [Ontology Name].

Named Individuals

Adaptabilityni back to ToC or Named Individual ToC

IRI: https://meta.linked.archi/quality-attributes#Adaptability

The degree to which a system can adapt itself (e.g., by restructuring, reconfiguring, load balancing, or spinning up additional resources) to changing conditions, enabling it to respond to and recover from adverse events.
belongs to
quality attribute c

Anti-Tamperni back to ToC or Named Individual ToC

IRI: https://meta.linked.archi/quality-attributes#Anti-Tamper

The degree to which a system protects its critical capabilities from harm due to tampering (reverse engineering) intended to disclose or modify critical program information (CPI).
belongs to
quality attribute c

Availabilityni back to ToC or Named Individual ToC

IRI: https://meta.linked.archi/quality-attributes#Availability

The degree to which a system is operational and accessible when required for use. A resilient system needs to maintain the availability of its critical capabilities during adverse conditions.
belongs to
quality attribute c

Capacityni back to ToC or Named Individual ToC

IRI: https://meta.linked.archi/quality-attributes#Capacity

The degree to which a system protects its critical capabilities from harm due to excessive loads such as transactions, commands, and messages.
belongs to
quality attribute c

Cybersecurityni back to ToC or Named Individual ToC

IRI: https://meta.linked.archi/quality-attributes#Cybersecurity

The degree to which a system protects against cyberattacks. Includes Threat Tolerance — the ability to detect and respond to cybersecurity threats and vulnerabilities to make a successful attack less likely.
belongs to
quality attribute c

Evolvabilityni back to ToC or Named Individual ToC

IRI: https://meta.linked.archi/quality-attributes#Evolvability

The degree to which a system can accommodate changes in its requirements, environment, or technology over its lifetime without degrading other quality attributes.
belongs to
quality attribute c

Interoperabilityni back to ToC or Named Individual ToC

IRI: https://meta.linked.archi/quality-attributes#Interoperability

The degree to which a system can exchange and use information with other systems. Includes Faulty Communications Tolerance — the ability to protect critical capabilities from harm due to lost or degraded communication with external systems.
belongs to
quality attribute c

Longevityni back to ToC or Named Individual ToC

IRI: https://meta.linked.archi/quality-attributes#Longevity

The degree to which a system maintains its operational capability as physical component ages reach or exceed their design limits. Longevity controls (e.g., radiation-hardened hardware, subsystem hibernation) help avoid disruptions over a long operational lifespan.
belongs to
quality attribute c

Maintainabilityni back to ToC or Named Individual ToC

IRI: https://meta.linked.archi/quality-attributes#Maintainability

The degree to which a system can be effectively and efficiently modified, corrected, or adapted. A system is more resilient if it can repair itself rather than relying on a human maintainer.
belongs to
quality attribute c

Performanceni back to ToC or Named Individual ToC

IRI: https://meta.linked.archi/quality-attributes#Performance

The degree to which a system meets its timing and throughput requirements. High levels of resilience in terms of detection may decrease performance in terms of throughput and response time.
belongs to
quality attribute c

Reliabilityni back to ToC or Named Individual ToC

IRI: https://meta.linked.archi/quality-attributes#Reliability

The degree to which a system performs its intended functions under stated conditions for a specified period. Low reliability leads to numerous faults and failures, requiring higher levels of resilience for detection, response, and recovery.
belongs to
quality attribute c

Reparabilityni back to ToC or Named Individual ToC

IRI: https://meta.linked.archi/quality-attributes#Reparability

The degree to which a system can repair itself (e.g., by automatically replacing subsystems or line-replaceable units) to recover after an adverse event.
belongs to
quality attribute c

Safetyni back to ToC or Named Individual ToC

IRI: https://meta.linked.archi/quality-attributes#Safety

The degree to which a system avoids harm to people, property, or the environment. Includes Accident Tolerance (the ability to detect, respond to, and recover from accidents) and Hazard Tolerance (the ability to detect and respond to hazards to avoid accidents or limit harm).
belongs to
quality attribute c

Survivabilityni back to ToC or Named Individual ToC

IRI: https://meta.linked.archi/quality-attributes#Survivability

The degree to which a system protects its critical capabilities from harm due to physical attacks or threats, including the ability to detect threats and respond appropriately.
belongs to
quality attribute c

Legend back to ToC

ni: Named Individuals

Acknowledgments back to ToC

The authors would like to thank Silvio Peroni for developing LODE, a Live OWL Documentation Environment, which is used for representing the Cross Referencing Section of this document and Daniel Garijo for developing Widoco, the program used to create the template used in this documentation.