Stovepipe System

In engineering and computing, a stovepipe system is a legacy system which cannot be upgraded or refactored and which must be built around until it can be replaced entirely. Examples of stovepipe systems:
  • Systems for which new hardware is no longer available.
  • Systems whose original source code has been lost.
  • Systems that were built using old or ad hoc engineering methodologies for which support can no longer be found.
The term is also used to describe a system that does not interoperate with other systems, presuming instead that it is the only extant system. A stovepipe system is an example of an anti-pattern.

See also

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
drive in theater
suicide king
thermoelectric cooling
fitness landscape
enrique camarena
parliamentary opposition
xhemil dino
round island day gecko
v20
achewood
chinatown, london
the vicomte de bragelonne
tovarna avtomobilov maribor
chehalis
bahamut
cheyne walk
twenty years after
joachim
naval air station willow grove
greymalkin
blue plaque
chehalis river
akuma (street fighter character)
logan's run
virginia rail
kunoichi
battle of yalu river (1904)
ingvar ambjrnsen
hatcher
courage the cowardly dog
imv
venus flytrap
roverandom
heinrich raspe
maryland (disambiguation)
maryland, london
gonzo
muhammad ahmad
d'artagnan romances
stewart's fountain classics
yang di pertuan negara
synchronous failure
adria airways
dominical letter