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Software Requirements Engineering

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Presentation on theme: "Software Requirements Engineering"— Presentation transcript:

1 Software Requirements Engineering

2 Types of Requirements IEEE Std 830 – Defines the following kinds of requirements: Functional External interfaces Performance Logical database Design constraints: standards compliance; software systems attributes Software system attributes: reliability; availability; security; maintainability; portability

3 External Interfaces

4 Requirements Specification for Real-Time Systems
Specification methods: formal, informal, semiformal

5 Formal Methods in Software Specification
There are three general uses for formal methods: Consistency checking Model Checking Theorem Proving Formal methods also provide opportunities for reusing. Example from the nuclear monitoring system: 1.1. If interrupt A occurs then task B stops executing 1.2. Task A begins executing upon arrival of interrupt A 1.3. Either task A is executing and task B is not, or task B is executing and task A is not, or both are not executing p – interrupt A arrives; q – task B is executing; r – task A is executing

6

7 Finite State Machine

8 Finite State Machine

9 Mealy Automaton

10 Statecharts

11 Statecharts Chain reaction:
Orthogonal states: if state Y consists of and components A and D, Y is called an orthogonal product of A and D. If Y is entered from outside, both states A and D are entered simultaneously. Communication between the and states can be achieved via global memory, whereas synchronization can be achieved through broadcast communication. Broadcast communication is depicted by the transition of orthogonal states based on the same event. Broadcast communication can describe a chain reaction.

12 Petri Nets

13 Petri Nets

14 Petri Nets

15 Requirements Analysis with Petri Nets
They can be used for race condition and deadlock identification

16 Structured Analysis and Design

17 Structured Analysis and Design

18 Object-Oriented Analysis and the Unified Modeling Language

19 UML Class Diagrams

20 Requirements Document

21 Software Requirements Organization

22 Requirements to Software Requirements
Correct Unambiguous (not subject to different interpretations) Complete Consistent (no contradicting requirements) Ranked for importance Verifiable Modifiable (information hiding) Traceable

23 Language Issues

24 Requirements Validation

25 Software System Design
Software Properties Reliability 1.1. r(t) – probability that time T of failure is greater than t: 1.2. Failure function 1.3. Mean time to first failure (MTFF) and Mean time between failures (MTBF)

26 Software Properties 2. Correctness (close to reliability)
3. Performance 4. Usability 5. Interoperabililty (ability of coexist and cooperate with other systems. Can be measured in terms of compliance with open system standards) 6. Maintainability - a system in which changes are are easy to implement 6.1. Evolvability (how easy to incorporate new) 6.2. Repairability (how easy to fix bugs) 7. Portability 8. Verifiability

27

28 Basic Software Engineering Principles
Rigor and Formality – use mathematical and algorithmic descriptions Separation of Concerns – Divide-and-Conquer Modularity

29 Cohesion and Coupling

30 Basic Software Engineering Principles
4. Anticipation of Change 5. Generality 6. Incrementality – increment provides additional functionality, brings the product closer to the final one 7. Traceability – a high level of traceability ensures that the software requirements flow down through the design and code and then can be traced back up at every stage of the process. Traceability can be obtained by providing links between all documentation and the software code

31 The Design Activity

32 Procedural-Oriented Design
Top-down or bottom-up approaches. Parnas partitioning uses principle of information hiding. A list of difficult decisions of things which are likely to change is prepared. Modules are then designated to hide the eventual implementation of of each design decision or feature from the rest of the system. Thus, only the function of the module is visible to other modules, not the method of implementation. Changes in these modules are not likely to affect the rest of the system.

33 Structured Design and Analysis

34 Structured Design and Analysis
Data Dictionary is supported: Entry type (data flow, data store, terminator, process) Name Alias Description Found in Real-Time Extensions of SASD Dashed lines are used to show control flow and solid bars show “stored” control commands (control stores)

35 Relationship between Data and Control Flow Diagrams

36 Design in Procedural Form Using FSM

37 Object-Oriented Design
OO languages are characterized by data abstraction, inheritance, polymorphism and messaging. Open-Closed Principle – classes should be open to extensions but closed to modifications Once and Only Once – any aspect of the software system should exist in only one copy Dependency Inversion Principle – high-level modules should not depend on low-level modules

38 OO Design Using UML

39 UML Diagrams Activity diagrams – close to flow charts but can model parallel activities Class diagrams Collaboration diagrams – show messages passed between objects Component diagrams – are made of components, interfaces and relationships Deployment diagrams – show real-world nodes and deployment of components in them Object diagrams are related to class diagrams Sequence diagrams are related to collaboration diagrams Statechart Diagrams

40 UML Sequence Diagrams

41 UML Collaboration Diagrams

42 UML Statechart Diagrams

43 UML Activity Diagrams

44 UML Deployment Diagrams


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