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Software Review Process and Level of FAA Involvement

Software Review Process and Level of FAA Involvement. Software and Complex Electronic Hardware Standardization Conference . Brenda S. Ocker, Software Technical Specialist. July 27, 2005. Presentation Overview. Background Overview of the Software Review Process

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Software Review Process and Level of FAA Involvement

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  1. Software Review Process and Level of FAA Involvement Software and Complex Electronic Hardware Standardization Conference Brenda S. Ocker, Software Technical Specialist July 27, 2005

  2. Presentation Overview • Background • Overview of the Software Review Process • Four Types of Software Reviews • Preparing, Conducting, and Documenting the Software Review • Determining the Level of FAA Involvement • Summary

  3. Background • RTCA/DO-178B, Section 9.2 • “Certification authority reviews may take place at the applicant’s facilities or the applicant’s suppliers’ facilities.” • RTCA/DO-178B, Section 10.3 • “The certification authority may review at its discretion the software life cycle processes and their outputs during the software life cycle as discussed in subsection 9.2.”

  4. Background • Order 8110.49, Chapter 2 • Provides guidelines for performing software reviews • Documents the review approach, which is detailed in FAA Job Aid “Conducting Software Reviews Prior to Certification”

  5. Background • Order 8110.49, Chapter 3 • Provides guidelines for determining the Level of FAA Involvement (LOFI) in a software project • When the FAA should be involved • To what extent the FAA should be involved • Which areas the FAA should focus their involvement

  6. Software Review Process Assess LOFI Determine Number, Type, and Timing of Software Reviews ConductSoftware Reviews Use Job Aid & DO-178B

  7. Objectives of Software Review • Address technical issues in a timely manner • Physically examine compliance data • Verify adherence to plans and procedures • Monitor designees

  8. Review Process & Life Cycles • Begin early in the software life cycle • Integrated throughout the software life cycle • Regular communication between applicant and certification authority

  9. Four Types of Software Reviews • Planning • Development • Verification • Final Certification

  10. Software Planning Review • Stage of Involvement (SOI) # 1 • Determine if plans and standards provide an acceptable means for satisfying objectives of RTCA/DO-178B

  11. Software Planning Review • Conducted when initial software planning process is complete • Plans and standards have been internally reviewed • Plans and standards have been reviewed by SQA • Plans and standards are approved and under configuration control

  12. Software Planning Review SOI # 1 Planning Requirements Design • PSAC • SDP • SVP • SCMP • SQAP • Standards • Tool Qual. Plans • Verif. Data • SQA data • SCM data Code/Integration Integration/Test Tables A-1, A-8, A-9, A-10

  13. Software Development Review • Stage of Involvement (SOI) # 2 • Determine if software development in accordance with approved plans and standards

  14. Software Development Review • Conducted when at least 50% of development data is complete • High-level requirements are documented, reviewed, and traceable to system requirements • Software architecture is defined and reviews and analyses are complete • Low-level requirements are documented, reviewed, and traceable to high-level requirements • Source code implements low-level requirements, is traceable to low-level requirements, and has been reviewed

  15. Software Development Review Planning SOI # 2 Requirements Design Code/Integration • Software Req. Data: - High-Level Reqs. - Derived High- Level Reqs. • Req. Standards • Verif. data • SQA data • SCM data Integration/Test • Design Description: - Architecture - Low-Level Reqs. - Derived Low-Level Reqs. • Design Standards • Verif. data • SQA data • SCM data • Source Code • Executable Object Code • Code Standards • Verif. data • SQA data • SCM data Tables A-2, A-3, A-4, A-5, A-8, A-9, A-10

  16. Software Verification Review • Stage of Involvement (SOI) # 3 • Determine if software verification in accordance with approved plans • Ensure requirements, design, code and integration appropriately verified • Ensure verification process will achieve • Requirements based test coverage • Appropriate level of structural coverage

  17. Software Verification Review • Conducted when at least 50% of verification and testing data is complete • Development data is complete, reviewed, and under configuration control • Test cases and procedures are documented, reviewed, and under configuration control • Test cases and procedures have been executed (formally or informally) • Test results are documented • Testing environment is documented and controlled

  18. Software Verification Review Planning Requirements SOI # 3 Design Code/Integration Integration/Test • Test cases and procedures • Test results • Verif. data • SQA data • SCM data Tables A-2, A-6, A-7, A-8, A-9, A-10

  19. Final Certification Review • Stage of Involvement (SOI) # 4 • Determine compliance of final product with objectives of RTCA/DO-178B • Verify that all software related problem reports, action items, and certification issues have been addressed

  20. Final Certification Review • Conducted when final software build is complete and ready for formal system certification approval • Software Conformity Review has been conducted • Software Accomplishment Summary and Software Configuration Index are complete • All other software life cycle data are complete and under configuration control

  21. Final Certification Review Planning Requirements Design • PSAC • SDP • SVP • SCMP • SQAP • Standards • Verif. data • SQA data • SCM data Code/Integration SOI # 4 • Software Req. Data: - High-Level Reqs. - Derived High- Level Reqs. • Verif. data • SQA data • SCM data Integration/Test • Design Description: - Architecture - Low-Level Reqs. - Derived Low-Level Reqs. • Verif. data • SQA data • SCM data • Source Code • Executable Object Code • Verif. data • SQA data • SCM data • Test Cases and Procedures • Test Results • Verif. data • SQA data • SCM data • Cert liaison ALLTables TablesA-1, A-8, A-9, A-10 Tables A-2, A-7 A-8, A-9, A-10 Tables A-2, A-3, A-4, A-5, A-6, A-8, A-9, A-10

  22. Review Process • Prepare for the review • Notify the applicant • Conduct the review • Document the results • Brief the applicant • Follow-up activities

  23. Preparing for the Review • Assemble review team • Software engineering • Systems engineering • SCM • SQA • Prepare for review • Draft agenda • Coordinate with applicant

  24. Notify the Applicant • Provide written notification • Purpose of review • Date and duration • Review team • DO-178B objectives to be addressed and data to be reviewed • Data to be submitted before review • Request appropriate personnel be available to answer questions during review • Recommend applicant perform self-assessment before review

  25. Conducting the Review • Certification authority entry briefing • Applicant briefing • Conduct review • Reading • Interviewing • Sampling • Witnessing • Certification authority exit briefing

  26. Document the Results • List of all data items reviewed • Explanation of Findings and Observations • Finding: Identification of a failure to show compliance with one or more of the DO-178B objectives • Observation: Identification of potential software life cycle improvement • Identify any other certification issues and action items

  27. Follow-up • Provide written report to applicant • Follow-up on findings, observations, certification issues, and action items • Schedule additional reviews as needed

  28. Level of FAA Involvement • When the FAA should be involved • To what extent the FAA should be involved • Which areas the FAA should focus their involvement

  29. Level of FAA Involvement • Number, type, and depth of reviews will vary depending on: • Software Level • Product attributes (e.g. size, complexity) • New technology or novel design • Experience with DO-178B • Experience with Certification • Designee Support • Other special considerations

  30. Determining the LOFI • Applicant and Certification Authority work together to determine LOFI at the beginning of the project • Three Levels of Involvement • High • Medium • Low

  31. Determining the LOFI • Software level is the starting point: • Level A = Medium or High • Level B = Medium or High • Level C = Low or Medium • Level D = Low • Reference Table 3-1 in Order 8110.49

  32. Determining the LOFI • Need to consider other relevant criteria for levels A, B, and C • Software Certification Experience • Demonstrated Software Development Capability • Software Service History • Current System and Software Application • Designee Capabilities • Reference Table 3-2 in Order 8110.49

  33. Figure 3-2: Other Relevant Criteria • Software Certification Experience • Experience with civil aircraft or engine certification • Experience with RTCA/DO-178B • Experience with RTCA/DO-178 or RTCA/DO-178A • Experience with other software standards (other than RTCA/DO-178[ ])

  34. Figure 3-2: Other Relevant Criteria • Demonstrated Software Development Capability • Ability to consistently produce RTCA/DO-178B software products • Cooperation, openness, and resource commitments • Ability to manage software development and subcontractors • Capability assessments (for example, Software Engineering Institute Capability Maturity Model, ISO 9001-3) • Development team average based on relevant software development experience

  35. Figure 3-2: Other Relevant Criteria • Software Service History • Incidents of software-related problems (as a percentage of affected products) • Company management’s support of DERs • Company software quality assurance organization and configuration management process • Company stability and commitment to safety • Success of past company certification efforts

  36. Figure 3-2: Other Relevant Criteria • Current System and Software Application • Complexity of the system architecture, functions, and interfaces. • Complexity and size of the software and safety features • Novelty of design and use of new technology • Software development and verification environment • Use of alternative methods or additional considerations

  37. Figure 3-2: Other Relevant Criteria • Designee Capabilities • Experience of DER(s) with RTCA/DO-178B • Designee authority, autonomy, and independence • Designee cooperation, openness, and issue resolution effectiveness • Relevance of assigned DERs experience. • Designees’ current workload. • Experience of DER(s) with other software standards (other than RTCA/DO-178[])

  38. Figure 3-2: Other Relevant Criteria • Minimum and Maximum values for each criteria • “Experience with RTCA/DO-178B” • No projects = 0 • 2-4 projects = 5 • More than 5 projects = 10 • “Experience with other software standards” • No projects = 0 • 4-6 projects = 2 • More than 7 projects = 4 • Scale is weighted • “Experience with RTCA/DO-178B” is weighted higher than “Experience with other software standards”

  39. Total Score Result (TSR) (from figure 3-2) Software Level A Software Level B Software Level C Software Level D TSR < 80 HIGH HIGH MEDIUM LOW 130 < TSR MEDIUM MEDIUM LOW LOW 80 < TSR < 130 HIGH MEDIUM MEDIUM LOW Figure 3-3: LOFI Determination NOTE 1: If the TSR is close to the TSR boundary values (that is, 80or 130), use the software level and engineering judgment to determine the most appropriate LOFI. NOTE 2: If any criterion in figure 3-2 is not applicable, the assessormay use the average value or adjust the figure 3-3 boundaries.

  40. Determining the LOFI • Projects with issues that require new FAA policy typically require more FAA involvement • Level A and B = High • Level C and D = Medium

  41. Determining the LOFI • Document specifics of FAA involvement using Appendix 1 in Order 8110.49 • Number and type of FAA on-site reviews • Number and type of FAA desk reviews • Data to be submitted to the FAA • Delegation to DERs

  42. Appendix 1: LOFI Worksheet Plan Based on LOFI Assessment: (for example, number of FAA on-site reviews, number of FAA desk reviews, data to be submitted to the FAA, and delegation to DERs) Mid-Mid-Project Adjustments: (based on project improvements or problems) Actual Project Results: (for example, number of FAA on-site reviews, number of FAA desk reviews, data submitted to the FAA, and delegation to DERs)

  43. Example: High LOFI • Minimal delegation • Recommend approval of all data • Software specialists involved • FAA involvement throughout software life cycle • At least 2 on-site reviews • Submittal of all software plans • Submittal of SAS, SCI, Verification Results, and Compliance Matrix

  44. Example: Medium LOFI • Moderate delegation • Recommend Approval of PSAC and SAS • Approve SCI and other data • FAA involvement at beginning and end of software life cycle • Software specialists may be involved • At least 1 on-site review • Submittal of PSAC, SCI, and SAS • Potential submittal of other software plans and Compliance Matrix

  45. Example: Low LOFI • Maximum delegation • DER Recommend Approval of PSAC and SAS • DER Approve all other software data • Minimal FAA involvement • No on site reviews • Few desk-top reviews • Software specialists not involved • Submittal of PSAC, SCI, SAS

  46. Additional Information • Reference the FAA Software Job Aid "Conducting Software Reviews Prior to Certification” • View “Using the Software Job-Aid to Conduct Software Reviews” Video • Available through FAA Web-site:http://www.faa.gov/certification/aircraft/ • Link to “Aircraft Certification Software” on lower right hand side of page

  47. Summary • Overview of the Software Review Process • Four Types of Software Reviews • Planning • Development • Verification • Final • Preparing, Conducting, and Documenting the Software Review

  48. Summary • Determine the LOFI at beginning of project • Order 8110.49, Figures 3-1, 3-2, and 3-3 • Document LOFI Assessment • Order 8110.49, Appendix 1 • Make adjustments to the LOFI during the project, if needed • Reference the examples • Order 8110.49, Appendix 2, 3, and 4

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