Architecture health, scored

Eight checks score your whole model and every source feeding it. Every finding links straight to the entity, column or operation it concerns, so the scorecard is a worklist, not a wall of numbers.

You cannot improve what you cannot see. NeoArc continuously assesses the health of your architecture and turns it into a scorecard a team can act on and a leader can track.

Eight checks over the whole estate

NeoArc runs a panel of checks across the model and its projections:

  • Lineage drift: wiring whose source was renamed, retyped, deprecated or deleted.
  • Wiring coverage: projections with nothing wired in, and model entities nothing draws from.
  • Governance gaps: sensitive fields with no control in force, and policies bound to nothing.
  • Completeness: entities missing a description or a primary key.
  • Structural health: foreign keys pointing nowhere, and orphaned entities.
  • Lifecycle: deprecated things that name no successor.
  • Compliance metadata: sources missing an owner, a criticality or a jurisdiction.
  • API health: public, unauthenticated or deprecated operations still on the surface.

Two lenses

Read the scorecard by report, a card per check across the whole project, or by source, a scored card for each contributing model and provider, worst first. The first view is how an architect fixes their own model. The second is how a lead sees the state of every team's contribution and ranks by risk.

Findings you can act on

Every finding links straight to the exact place it lives, a model field, a database column, an API operation, using the same navigation as the impact graph. You go from "this is wrong" to standing on the thing that is wrong in one click. Filter and sort by severity, and export the current view to share. The scorecard is a worklist, not a poster.

Health stops being a quarterly review deck and becomes a live property of the architecture, visible to the people accountable for it, every day.