Requirements traceability

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Requirements traceability is a sub-discipline of requirements management within software development and systems engineering. Requirements traceability is concerned with documenting the life of a requirement. It should be possible to trace back to the origin of each requirement and every change made to the requirement should therefore be documented in order to achieve traceability. Even the use of the requirement after the implemented features have been deployed and used should be traceable[1].

Contents

[edit] Overview

Traceability as a general term is the "ability to chronologically interrelate the uniquely identifiable entities in a way that matters." The word chronology here reflects the use the term in the context of tracking food from farm to shop, or drugs from factory to mouth. What matters in requirements management is not a temporal evolution so much as a structural evolution: a trace of where requirements are derived from, how they are satisfied, how they are tested, and what impact will result if they are changed.

Requirements come from different sources, like the business person ordering the product, the marketing manager and the actual user. These people all have different requirements on the product. Using requirements traceability an implemented feature can be traced back to the person, or group, that wanted it during the requirements elicitation. This can eg. be used during the development process to prioritize the requirement, determining how valuable the requirement is to a specific user. It can also be used after the deployment when user studies show that a feature is not used, to see why it was required in the first place.

Requirements Traceability is concerned with documenting the relationships between requirements and other development artifacts. Its purpose is to facilitate:

  • the understanding of product under development and its artifact; and
  • the ability to manage change.

Not only the requirements themselves should be traced but also the requirements relationship with all the artifacts associated with it, such as models, analysis results, test cases, test procedures, test results and documentation of all kinds. Even people and user groups assoiciated with requirements should be traceble.

[edit] Definitions

A much cited [2] [3] [4] [5] definition of requirements traceability is the following:

"Requirements traceability refers to the ability to describe and follow the life of a requirement, in both forwards and backwards direction (i.e. from its origins, through its development and specification, to its subsequent deployment and use, and through all periods of on-going refinement and iteration in any of these phases.)" [6]

While this definition emphasizes tracking the life of a requirement through all phases of development, it is not explicit in mentioning that traceability may document relationships between many kinds of development artifacts, such as requirements, specification statements, designs, tests, models and developed components. The next definition addresses this issue:

"Requirements traceability refers to the ability to define, capture and follow the traces left by requirements on other elements of the software development environment and the trace left by those elements on requirements." [7]

The following definition emphasises the use of traceability to document the transformation of a requirement into successively concrete design and development artifacts:

"In the requirements engineering field, traceability is about understanding how high-level requirements -- objectives, goals, aims, aspirations, expectations, needs -- are transformed into low-level requirements. It is therefore primarily concerned with the relationships between layers of information." [8]

The principal relationship referred to here may be characterised as "satisfaction": how is a requirement satisfied by other artifacts? Other relationships that can be traced are, for example, "verification": how is a requirement verified by test artifacts?

[edit] Tracing tools

There are several requirements management computer programs on the market for storing all requirements of all specifications of a technical system under development, which are arranged in a specification tree and linking each one to the "parent" requirement in the higher specification.

Evaluation functions allow for

  • completess checks i.e. do all system level requirements go down to equipment level (with or without modification)
  • assessment of requirements deviations over all levels
  • qualification status presentation
  • etc.

Requirements tracing tools:

Tracing Tools

[edit] External links

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ Gotel, O., Finkelstein, A. An Analysis of the Requirements Traceability Problem Proc. of First International Conference on Requirements Engineering, 1994, pages 94-101
  2. ^ Sampaio do Prado Leite, Julio Cesar; Jorge Horacio Doorn (2004). Perspectives on Software Requirements. Kluwer Academic Publishers, pp. 91-113. ISBN 1-4020-7625-8. 
  3. ^ Requirements Tracing -- An overview. Retrieved on 2007-05-11.
  4. ^ Turbit. Requirements Traceability. Retrieved on 2007-05-11.
  5. ^ Requirements Traceability. Retrieved on 2007-05-11.
  6. ^ Gotel O.C.Z and Finklestein A.C.W., "An analysis of the requirements traceability problem", in Proceedings of ICRE94, 1st International Conference on Requirements Engineering, Colorado Springs, Co, IEEE CS Press, 1994
  7. ^ Pinheiro F.A.C. and Goguen J.A., "An object-oriented tool for tracing requirements", IEEE Software 1996, 13(2), pp. 52-64
  8. ^ Hull, Elizabeth; Ken Jackson, Jeremy Dick (2005). Requirements Engineering (Second Edition). Springer, pp. 9-13, 131-151. ISBN 1-85233-879-2.