held in St Andrews, Scotland on 21–22 May 2004. The workshop provided an international forum for researchers and practitioners from academia and industry to discuss a wide range of topics in the area of software architecture and to jointly formulate an agenda for future research. We were pleased to continue this forum in EWSA 2005. The importance of software architecture as a fundamental area of software engineering continues to grow. In addition to describing the underlying structure of software systems, architectures are now being used to model and understand dynamic behavior. New areas of study, which have their roots in control systems, are beginning to emerge. The field of autonomics requires an underlying software architecture to describe the executing computation as does any control system that involves system evolution. The range of papers in EWSA 2005 reflected both the traditional and new applications of software architecture techniques. EWSA 2005 distinguished between three types of papers: research papers (which describe authors’ novel research work), a case study (which describes experiences related to software architectures)and position papers (which present concise arguments about a topic of software architecture research or practice). The Programme Committee selected 18 papers (12 research papers, 4 position papers, 1 case study, and 1 unrefereed invited paper) out of 41 submissions from 20 countries (Australia, Belgium, Brazil, Chile, China, Czech Republic, Finland, France, Germany, India, Italy, Ireland, Korea, Netherlands, Pakistan, Portugal, Spain, Switzerland, UK, USA). All submissions were reviewed by at least three members of the Programme Committee. Papers were selected based on originality, quality, soundness and relevance to the workshop. Credit for the quality of the proceedings goes to all authors of papers. |