software engineering week 9 – brief introduction of requirement #1 a.a. gde bagus ariana, s.t....
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SoftwareEngineeringWeek 9 – Brief Introduction of Requirement #1
A.A. Gde Bagus Ariana, [email protected]
http://gungariana.wordpress.com
Objectives
• To introduce the concepts of user and system requirements
• To describe functional and non-functional requirements
• To explain how software requirements may be organised in a requirements document
Why Important?
• The hardest single part of building a software system is deciding precisely what to build. No other part of conceptual work is as difficult as establishing the detailed technical requirements, including all the interfaces to people, to machines and to other software systems. No other part of the work so cripples the resulting system If done wrong. No other part is more difficult to rectify later.
(Brooks 1987)
Causes of the failed projects
• Incomplete requirements (13.1%)• Lack of user involvement (12.4%)• Lack of resources (10.6%)• Unrealistic expectations (9.9%)• Lac of executive support (9.3%)• Changing requirements and specifications (8.7%)• Lack of planning (8.1%)• System no longer needed (7.5%)
Requirements Engineering Domains
Boundary
The Requirements Process :2 Documents
• Req. definition– Complete listing of customer’s system
expectations– High-level abstract description of req.– Natural language + simple diagrams– Limitations & constraints– From customer-supplied info.– Written for customers
The Requirements Process
• Definition of Requirement– Feature of system– Description of system
• Process– Action to determine the req.
• Capable of doing•There is a purpose
• Req. specification– Restates req. definition in technical terms– For sys. designers to follow– Detailed desc. ? system should do– Sets out sys. services in detail– A.k.a. Functional Spec.– Cust./User/Developer contract– Written as a contract between customer and
developer
The Requirements Process :2 Documents
The Requirements Process
• S/W specification– More detailed description– Bridge req. process & design activities– S/W abstracts basis: design & implementation
The Requirements Process
ProblemAnalysis
ProblemDescription
Prototypingand testing
Documentation & Validation
Have we captured all the user need?
Are we usingthe right techniques or views?
Is this functionfeasible?
Have we captured what the user expects?
Reqn Elicitation and AnalysisReqn Definition and Specification
Feasibility study Reqn Analysis
Reqn Definition
Reqn SpecificationSystem models
Definition of reqn
Specification of reqnReqn Document
Feasibility Report
The Requirements Process
• Req. elicitation– Developers work with cust. :• Asking questions• Demonstrating similar systems• Developing prototypes
– Problem analysis identify:• People• Processes• Resources
ProblemAnalysis
ProblemDescription
Prototypingand testing
Have we captured all the user need?
Are we usingthe right techniques or views?
Is this functionfeasible?
Reqn Elicitation and Analysis
The Requirements Process• Req. definition & spec.– 3 categories of req.:• Must be met• Highly desirable but not necessary• Possible but could be eliminated
Documentation & Validation
Have we captured what the user expects?
Reqn Definition and Specification
The Requirements Process• Req. definition & specification– Doc. formal agreement• Req. specific descriptions of
functions/charateristics • Req. does not specify “how” (E.g. what DBMS or pgm. Lang. to use)
The Requirements Process
• 2 steps ensuring req. fully mapped & understood:– Verification complete, correct & consistent
requirements– Validation developers described what customer
intends
Configuration Mgmt.
• Set of procedures that track:– Requirements– Designs– Program codes– Tests strategies & approaches– Documents
Functional & Non
• Functional req.– Capture the intended behavior of the system ie.
tasks or functions the system is required to perform.
– Use cases have quickly become a widespread practice for capturing functional requirements
– E.g. engine for a vehicle & invoice generation for a Debtors accounting system
Functional & Non
• Functional req.
Functional & Non• Non-functional req.– Describes a restriction on the system– Split into two types: • performance and development.
• Performance Constraints– The response time for information to appear to a user.– The number of hours a system should be available.– The number of records a system should be able to hold.– The capacity for growth of the system.– The length of time a record should be held for auditing purposes.
Functional & Non• For the customer records example these might be:– Information should be made available and be stored in a
maximum of 3 seconds.– The system should be available from 9am to 5 pm Monday
to Friday.– The system should be able to hold a 100,000 customer
records initially.– The system should be able to add 10,000 records a year for
10 years.– A record should be fully available on the system for at least
7 years.
Functional & Non• Development constraints:– Time - When a system should be delivered is the obvious
time constraint.– Resource - How much money is available to develop the
system is obvious, but a key resource would be the amount of time business staff could spend in briefing system development staff.
– Quality - Any standards which are used to develop the system including project management, development methods etc.
How to Express Req.?
• Natural language– Problem• Not precise & unambiguous• Not easily separated system elements• Difficult to trace back
– Solution• Formal notation• Automated tools
A Picture Is Worth thousand Words
How to Express Req.?• Additional Reqn Notations– Hierarchical Techniques (Warnier-Orr
Diagram)– Data Flow Diagrams (DFD)– Software Req. Engineering Methodology
(SREM)– Structured Analysis & Design Technique
(SADT)– Formal Specification (Z)
How to Express Req.?
• Data Abstraction– Describing what the data are for– Each kind of data an object class type– Methods identified– UML’s diamond aggregation– UML’s horizontal arrow association
How to Express Req.?STUDENT
Student numberCredit-Hours
Compute Tuition
IN-STATE STUDENT
Student numberIn-State Rate
Compute Tuition
OUT-STATE-STUDENT
Student numberOut-of-State Rate
Compute Tuition
class name
attributes
methods
How to Express Req.?
• Object-Oriented Specification• Focus on entities involved• Data-abstraction elements within• Objects, attributes & methods• Distinguishable:– Encapsulation– Information hiding– Class hierarchies– Inheritance– Polymorphism
How to Express Req.?
• Data Flow Diagram (DFD)– You already know
IEEE requirements standard
• Defines a generic structure for a requirements document that must be instantiated for each specific system. – Introduction.– General description.– Specific requirements.– Appendices.– Index.
Requirements document structure• Preface• Introduction• Glossary• User requirements definition• System architecture• System requirements specification• System models• System evolution• Appendices• Index
Key points
• Requirements set out what the system should do and define constraints on its operation and implementation.
• Functional requirements set out services the system should provide.
• Non-functional requirements constrain the system being developed or the development process.
• User requirements are high-level statements of what the system should do. User requirements should be written using natural language, tables and diagrams.
Key points
• System requirements are intended to communicate the functions that the system should provide.
• A software requirements document is an agreed statement of the system requirements.
• The IEEE standard is a useful starting point for defining more detailed specific requirements standards.
Thank YouQuestion?
Tugas
• Buat resume tentang Requirement yang baik. Kriteria requirement yang baik adalah SMART:– Specific / spesifik– Measurable / terukur– Attainable / dapat dicapai– Realizable / daapt direalisasikan– Traceable / dapat dilacak
• Jelaskan dan beri contoh masing-masing kriteria diatas