ADS maps to multiple established frameworks. This page documents both the alignment (what ADS shares with each framework) and the differences (what ADS adds or does differently).
Each section page in the standard shows badges indicating which frameworks influenced that section:
Badge
Meaning
ISO 42010
Aligns with the ISO/IEC/IEEE 42010 conceptual model
4+1 View
Maps to a view in Kruchten’s 4+1 Architectural View Model
TOGAF
Aligns with a TOGAF architecture domain
AWS WAF
Derived from the AWS Well-Architected Framework
Azure WAF
Derived from the Azure Well-Architected Framework
The badges are informational only — they show provenance, not requirements. You do not need to comply with these external frameworks to conform to ADS.
ISO 42010 is a meta-standard — it defines concepts but deliberately leaves the concrete structure to implementers. ADS provides that concrete structure:
Aspect
ISO 42010
ADS
Prescribes sections?
No — defines concepts only
Yes — exact sections, tables, and fields
Quality assessment?
No
Yes — quality attributes from cloud WAFs
Documentation depths?
No
Yes — Minimum, Recommended, Comprehensive with RFC 2119
ADS derives its quality attributes from the cloud Well-Architected Frameworks:
Note: The cloud providers use American English spelling (e.g., “Optimization”). ADS uses British English (e.g., “Optimisation”). The table below preserves each provider’s original spelling.
Quality Attribute
AWS
Azure
GCP
Oracle
IBM
Operational Excellence
Operational Excellence
Operational Excellence
Operational Excellence
Operational Efficiency
Operational Excellence
Security
Security (ADS maps this to a dedicated Security View)
Security (ADS maps this to a dedicated Security View)
Security, Privacy & Compliance (ADS maps this to a dedicated Security View)
Security & Compliance (ADS maps this to a dedicated Security View)
Security (ADS maps this to a dedicated Security View)