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Process Principles for COTSBased Systems

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Title: Process Principles for COTSBased Systems


1
Process Principles for COTS-Based Systems
Tricia Oberndorf
  • 5 September 2003
  • Software Engineering Institute
  • Carnegie Mellon University
  • Pittsburgh PA 15213
  • Sponsored by the U.S. Department of Defense

2
Agenda
  • COTS Background
  • A/APCS Framework
  • CMMI Background
  • Implications of Using CMMI for COTS-Based
    Systems

3
COTS Background
  • Building systems today
  • Few entirely custom-built to order
  • Commercial products expected to play major role
  • Diverse things influence the shape and function
    of a COTS-based system (CBS)
  • Stakeholder needs
  • Product characteristics and marketplace dynamics
  • Degree of interaction with legacy systems
  • Together, these compel many changes in system
    development and maintenance methods for CBSs.

4
What is a COTS-based system?
  • A COTS product is one that is
  • Sold, leased, or licensed to the general public
  • Offered by a vendor trying to profit from it
  • Is supported and evolved by the vendor, who
    retains intellectual property rights
  • Available in multiple, identical copies
  • Used without modification of its internals
  • A COTS-based system is one that
  • Uses one or more off-the-shelf components from
    one or more suppliers plus any needed custom
    components
  • Is integrated to achieve new or expanded system
    functionality

Legacy
COTS products
Custom
Reuse assets
5
Conceptual Bases Requirements1
  • Nail down the requirements first will not work
    the marketplace will not cooperate
  • Think of it as a new sphere of influence

6
Conceptual Bases Requirements2
  • Requirements (cont.)
  • Must distinguish between negotiable and
    non-negotiable
  • Keep the non-negotiable set as small as possible
  • Understand how to prioritize and trade-off the
    negotiables
  • A risk-driven spiral approach is key
  • Frequent use of prototypes
  • Considerable interaction with systems end users
  • Gradual refinement of understanding of system

7
Conceptual Bases Knowledge
  • CBS development and maintenance is dependent on
    an evolving Body of Knowledge.

Non-negotiables
Prioritized negotiables
Marketplace offerings
Legacy system context
Evolving System View
Architecture and design constraints
End-user business processes
Acquisition constraints
Risks
8
Marketplace Affects CBS Approach
Requirements-driven
Negotiation-driven
9
The Process Framework
  • Based on these realizations and concepts, we have
    defined a framework that sets out the basics of a
    process that would be appropriate for the
    creation of a COTS-based system
  • A/APCS The Assembly/Acquisition Process for
    COTS-based Systems

10
Process Overview
  • Three classes of activities
  • Iterative short-term, engineering-oriented
  • Discovery gather and refine system knowledge
  • Assembly construct a prototype
  • Assessment determine success of iteration plan
  • Pervasive long-term, organizational scope
  • e.g., CM, license management, vendor relationship
    management, contract tracking and oversight
  • Executive event-driven, deal with decision
    making
  • e.g., cost estimating, contract negotiation,
    project oversight
  • Today we focus on the Iterative.

11
Discovery
  • Gather and Refine activities occur
    simultaneously.
  • Gather
  • Sources take many forms.
  • Stakeholders, business processes, legacy systems,
    COTS marketplace
  • Each is independent of the others.
  • There is no optimal order.
  • Refine
  • Analysis and harmonization of the gathered
    knowledge
  • Yields the technical definition of the emerging
    system
  • Finds gaps, negotiates conflicts

12
Discovery Activities
Knowledge is sufficient for constructing
executable
Continue Discovery
Harmonized data
Data from stakeholders products
Mismatch
Agreement
Refine
Gather
Gap - need more data
13
Assembly
  • Produces a prototype that reflects whats been
    discovered
  • Reflects a traditional sequential process
  • Guided by local candidate requirements
  • Iteration Objectives, Detailed Iteration Plan
    plus hypotheses and desired behaviors expect to
    derive from prototype
  • Vets candidate requirements
  • Produces an executable version of full system
  • Likely to have less than complete functionality
  • Executable, not paper or specification or small
    piece
  • Does not preclude prototyping in the small
    throughout

14
Evaluation and Assessment
  • Occur at two levels
  • Evaluation of the prototype in its own context
  • Measures actual outcome against expected outcome
  • Considers degree to which prototype satisfies its
    local requirements
  • Assessment of the iteration itself
  • Addresses issues at project (not iteration) level
  • Considers whether objectives were good ones
  • Determines whether iteration results indicate
    changes in project schedule, budget, etc.

15
On-going Iterations of A/APCS
Discovery
Assembly
Prototype
16
Key Aspects of COTS Approach
  • Simultaneous Definition and Trades
  • Parallel Business Process Engineering
  • Negotiable Requirements
  • Flexible Architecture
  • Current Market Knowledge
  • Integral Programmatics and Risks
  • Continuous Stakeholder Involvement
  • Disciplined Spiral or Iterative Practices
  • Frequent Executables

17
CMMI
  • Guidance for improving an organizations
    processes and ability to develop, acquire, and
    maintain products or services
  • Provides guidance for developing processes
  • is not processes or process descriptions
  • will not map one to one with the processes in
    your organization
  • Integrates four disciplines (bodies of knowledge)
  • System Engineering
  • Software Engineering
  • Integrated Product and Process Development
  • Supplier Sourcing
  • Expects all practices to be interpreted using
    knowledge of
  • CMMI
  • the organization
  • the business environment

CMMI process areas must be interpreted for each
targeted domain
18
Presentation Format
  • Important process considerations for a
    COTS-based system approach
  • Work Process Implications
  • High-level guidance for selected CMMI Process
    Areas or disciplines
  • Highlight particular relevance
  • Provide unique interpretation
  • Suggest new process areas
  • Correct misconceptions
  • Guidance for additional CMMI Process Areas for
    later reference

Take-away message for each aspect
19
Simultaneous Definition and Trades
  • Balanced consideration of four diverse spheres of
    influence
  • - Simultaneous discovery of information in each
  • - Decisions in one inform and constrain decisions
    in others
  • - Continuous identification and analysis of
    trades
  • - Trades negotiated as definition of the solution
    evolves
  • Selected Work Process Implications
  • Decision Analysis and Resolution continuous
    stakeholder negotiations require robust,
    agreed-upon decision processes
  • Technical Solution alternative solutions
    (including COTS product selection) are analyzed
    continuously to accommodate new information
  • Risk Management a key project risk is
    over-defining one sphere without adequate
    understanding of implications on other spheres
  • Project Planning project activities start
    concurrently with extensive interaction among
    them from project start until the system is
    retired
  • Verification and Validation continuous
    determination that information in each sphere is
    sufficient, complete, and meets operational needs

Continuously reconcile what stakeholders want
with what is available
20
Parallel Business Process Engineering
  • End-users must be willing/able to change
    business processes to match those in COTS
    products
  • Business process changes must be explicitly
    managed and coordinated as part of the project
  • Business processes may continue to change with
    new COTS releases or new COTS products
  • Selected Work Process Implications
  • CMMI does not address changes to end-user
    business processes expand concepts in
    Organizational Process Focus to plan and
    implement end-user business process improvement
  • Organizational Environment for Integration a
    shared vision of success among stakeholders, with
    suitable incentives and leadership, is critical
    to aligning business processes with alternative
    solutions
  • Project Planning/Integrated Project Management
    for IPPD implementing agreed upon business
    processes must be integrated in system planning

Align business process engineering with system
engineering
21
Negotiable Requirements
  • Requirements must be flexible enough to leverage
    available and projected COTS products
  • Committing to a requirement is premature until
    COTS product behavior is understood
  • As marketplace continues to change, requirements
    must be renegotiated
  • Selected Work Process Implications
  • Requirements Development must prioritize
    requirements to aid tradeoffs
  • stakeholders agree on minimum set of critical
    must-have requirements
  • evolvability is a high-priority, required quality
    attribute
  • Requirements Management disciplined and
    controlled management of requirements begins at
    project start to track identified and negotiated
    trades
  • Project Planning/Integrated Project Management
    for IPPD managing the project to encourage and
    reinforce the continual discovery of requirements
    while establishing sufficient stability to
    deliver a solution is challenging

Requirements formation is a journey of discovery
22
Flexible Architecture
  • Architecture is considered early evolves and is
    maintained until the system retired
  • Potential drivers of change accommodated in
    architecture
  • Selected Work Process Implications
  • Technical Solution each COTS product release
    requires evaluation and analysis of alternatives
    to support any incorporation decision
  • Describe behavior and linkage among system
    components for each
  • Product Integration composing and evaluating
    executable representations from project start is
    critical to verify and validate architecture
    suitability and evolvablity
  • Project Planning/Integrated Project Management
    for IPPD appropriate skills and resources are
    necessary to form, evaluate, and maintain system
    flexibility
  • include effort to create and maintain wrappers
    or glue and re-integrate solution as COTS
    products change

Architecture is created and maintained as a
corporate asset
23
Current Market Knowledge
  • Anticipate and track changes to relevant market
    segments until system retired
  • Anticipate and prototype system changes from
    updates to COTS products critical to the system
  • Influence (not direct) COTS product changes,
    technology investments, and standards development
  • Selected Work Process Implications
  • Supplier Agreement Management license
    agreements with COTS vendors must be negotiated
    to meet project needs
  • Integrated Supplier Management partnering with
    key vendors is critical (not just supplier
    management)
  • vendors seldom allow process monitoring use
    hands-on evaluation
  • relationships with vendors other customers helps
    to amplify leverage
  • Technical Solution modification of COTS
    products introduces long term maintenance
    considerations and sizeable risk to project
    avoid if possible
  • Project Planning significant resources may be
    required to monitor the marketplace and conduct
    COTS product evaluation including
    experimentation facilities

Marketplace is proactively monitored
24
Integral Programmatics and Risks
  • Analysis of alternative solutions includes team
    skills and expertise, cost, schedule, and
    associated risks for
  • building, fielding, and supporting the system
  • implementing any needed changes to business
    processes (functional, operational, support)
  • Selected Work Process Implications
  • Technical Solution engineering trades should
    include risk, cost, schedule and other
    programmatic factors associated with each
    alternative solution
  • Project Planning estimates of work product and
    task attributes should be generated for each
    alternative

Programmatic factors shape technical alternatives
25
Continuous Stakeholder Involvement
  • Significant commitment from all stakeholders
    required
  • identify, evaluate, and select alternative
    solutions
  • confirm results of any and all negotiations
  • agree evolving system meets their needs
  • Stakeholders must reflect full diversity of
    interests
  • Selected Work Process Implications
  • IPPD discipline integrated teaming among
    disparate stakeholders throughout the development
    and maintenance is essential
  • Validation end users must always be involved in
    validating solution suitability
  • Integrated Project Management for IPPD
    accommodates resources for stakeholder
    involvement
  • necessary changes to end-user operational
    processes must be explicitly and continuously
    managed and coordinated with solution development

Required stakeholder commitment may be
unprecedented
26
Disciplined Spiral or Iterative Practices
  • Continuously determine a compatible and feasible
    set of business processes, requirements, plans,
    design, COTS products, and other components
  • Enterprise business objectives drive solution
    definition
  • Risk considerations drive degree of detail
  • Marketplace dynamics drive development and
    maintenance processes
  • Selected Work Process Implications
  • Project Planning if not already implemented,
    extensive effort may be needed to revamp planning
    and engineering processes for a spiral
    development approach
  • Risk Management tracking effectiveness of risk
    mitigation is key
  • highest priority remaining risks should be used
    to (re) direct and manage the project

Spiral development facilitates developing a
viable solution
27
Frequent Executables
  • Frequent executable representations reduce risk
    and reduce misunderstandings
  • Provide critical insight into the solutions
    behavior
  • Explore critical system attributes
  • Validate end user business process
  • Verify technical viability
  • Selected Work Process Implications
  • Requirements Development, Technical Solution, and
    Product Integration each iteration should
    produce an executable representation reflecting
    current understanding of requirements, COTS
    products, business processes, and alternative
    designs explored and negotiated

Executable representations demonstrate
stakeholder buy-in
28
Conclusion
  • CBS
  • changes many things about your approach
  • requires even more discipline than custom
    development
  • Although it needs interpretation, CMMI is a sound
    basis for CBS process improvement.
  • Applying CMMI to CBSs is more than just Supplier
    Management
  • All four disciplines
  • All process area categories
  • Process areas will need to be integrated and
    applied differently
  • Must add in your own activities to plan, design,
    and deploy changes to enterprise processes

29
For more information
  • TR coming CMU/SEI-2003-TR-022
  • www.sei.cmu.edu/cbs
  • Tricia Oberndorf Lisa Brownsword
  • Director, Dynamic Systems Sr. MTS, CBS (ISIS)
  • 412-268-6138 703-908-8203
  • po_at_sei.cmu.edu llb_at_sei.cmu.edu
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