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Software Quality assurance (SQA) SWE 333

Software Quality assurance (SQA) SWE 333. Capability Maturity Level ( CMMi ). Dr Khalid Alnafjan kalnafjan@ksu.edu.sa. What is a CMMi ?. A Capability Maturity Model ( CMMi ) is a reference model of mature practices in a specified discipline, used to improve PROCESS at work

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Software Quality assurance (SQA) SWE 333

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  1. Software Quality assurance (SQA) SWE 333 Capability Maturity Level (CMMi) Dr Khalid Alnafjan kalnafjan@ksu.edu.sa

  2. What is a CMMi? • A Capability Maturity Model (CMMi) is a reference model of mature practices in a specified discipline, used to improve PROCESS at work • The results of adopting CMMi is a much better product or process quality. • Before we focus on CMMi we need to understand the meaning of a PROCESS so What is a PROCESS ?

  3. What is a process • A process is a series of actions or steps taken in order to achieve a particular end in the form of a product or service •  We may not realize it, but processes are everywhere and in every aspect of our leisure and work. A few examples of processes might include: •     Preparing breakfast •     Placing an order •     Developing a budget •     Writing a computer program • Obtaining application requirements • And so on

  4. Process Improvement • The quality of a system is highly influenced by the quality of the process used to acquire, develop, and maintain it. • even our finest people can’t perform at their best when the process is not understood or operating at its best.” • Everyone realizes the importance of having a motivated, quality work force and the latest technology, but even the finest people can’t perform at their best when the process is not understood or operating at its best • This premise implies a focus on processes as well as on products.

  5. Symptoms of Process Failure • Commitments consistently missed • Late delivery • Last minute crunches • Increasing costs • No management visibility into progress • You’re always being surprised. • Quality problems • Too much rework • Functions do not work correctly. • Customer complaints after delivery • Poor morale • People frustrated • Is anyone in charge?

  6. CMMI for Process Improvement The aim of CMMi is to improve processes so they can be performed in the best manner with least cost Use CMMI in process improvement activities as a • collection of best practices • framework for organizing and prioritizing activities • support for the coordination of multi-disciplined activities that might be required to successfully build a product • means to emphasize the alignment of the process improvement objectives with organizational business objectives

  7. Ad Hoc Processes (Not using CMMi) Processes are ad hoc and improvised by practitioners and their management Process describes are not rigorously followed or enforced Performance is highly dependent on current practitioners Understanding of the current status of a project is limited Immature processes result in fighting fires: • There is no time to improve – instead, practitioners are constantly reacting • Firefighters get burned • Embers might rekindle later

  8. Improved Processes (Using CMMi) Process descriptions are consistent with the way work actually is done They are defined, documented and continuously improved Processes are supported visibly by management and others They are well controlled – process fidelity is evaluated and enforced There is constructive use of product and process enforced There is constructive use of product and process measurement Technology is introduced in a disciplined manner

  9. Process Improvement and Football - an example • Let us take football as an example to show how process improvement can increase the quality of football game. • We will compare how play is performed between a little league team and a professional football team

  10. Process Improvement and Football - an example • What happens when a ball is hit to a Little League team? • Everyone runs around at random. • They might do the right thing, or they might not. • The next time the ball is hit in the same place, they may do something different. • What happens when a ball is hit to a professional team? • Everyone moves in a coordinated fashion, based on practicing that play many times. • Sometimes they fail to make the right play, but they almost always try to do the right thing.

  11. Process Improvement and Football - an example • A professional football team is more "mature" than a Little League team (not referring to age). • A professional team has self-perpetuating quality. They • Make good plays • Develop new players like themselves • Find ways to make better plays

  12. Process Improvement and Football - an example • What happens when the team loses a star player? • Little League team gets much worse. • Professional team often has someone waiting to fill in.   • Self-improvement after a bad play… • Little League players don’t know what went wrong, or they blame each other. • Professional teams discuss their play and look for ways to improve.

  13. … So what is CMMI? • In the same way, high-quality software organizations are different from low-quality organizations. • CMMI tries to capture and describe these differences. • CMMI strives to create software development organizations that are “mature”, or more mature than before applying CMMI.

  14. Capability Maturity Model® Integration (CMMI®)Capability Maturity Modeling, CMM, and CMMI are registered in the U.S. Patent andTrademark Office by Carnegie Mellon University.

  15. How CMMI Helps? CMMI provides guidance for improving an organization’s processes and ability to manage the development, acquisition and maintenance of products or services. CMMI places proven approaches into a structure that helps an organization: - appraise its organizational maturity or process area capability - establish priorities for improvement - implement these improvements

  16. Five levels of maturity …

  17. Summary of levels • Level 1 – Initial. Anything at all. Ad-hoc and chaotic. Will have some successes, but will also have failures and badly missed deadlines. • Level 2 – Repeatable. SW processes are defined, documented, practiced, and people are trained in them. Groups across an organization may use different processes.

  18. Summary of levels • Level 3 – Defined. SW processes are consistent and known across the whole organization. • Level 4 – Managed. SW processes and results are measured quantitatively, and processes are evaluated with this data. • Level 5 – Optimizing. Continuous process improvement. Experimenting with new methods and technologies. Change processes when find something that works better.

  19. Level 1 – Initial • Team tackles projects in different ways each time • Can have strong successes, but may not repeat  • Some time/cost estimates are accurate, many far off • Success comes from smart people doing the right things • Hard to recover from good people leaving • Frequent crises and "firefighting.” (Many believe this is standard for SW development. CMM says NO.) • Most SW development organizations are Level 1.

  20. Level 2 – Repeatable • Key areas • Requirements management • Software project planning • Project tracking and oversight • Subcontracts management • Quality assurance • Configuration management

  21. Level 3 – Defined • Key areas. Level 2, plus… • Organization-wide process focus • Organization-wide process definition • Training program in above • Integrated software management (above applied per project) • Software product engineering (coding, etc.) • Inter-group coordination • Peer reviews

  22. Level 4 – Managed • Key areas. Level 3, plus… • Quantitative process management (data gathering) • Quality management (data-driven quality improvement)

  23. Level 5 – Optimizing • Key areas. Level 4, plus… • Defect prevention • Technology change management (bring in new methods) • Process change management (improve processes)

  24. Level 5 – Optimizing • The optimizing level (Level 5) is not the destination of process management. • The destination is better products for a better price: economic survival • The optimizing level is a foundation for building an ever-improving capability.

  25. Example-Requirements Management SG 1: Manage Requirements SP1.1 : Obtain an understanding of the requirements SP1.2 : Obtain commitment to requirements SP1.3 :Manage Requirement Changes SP1.4 : Maintain bi- directional trace ability of Requirements SP1.5 : Identify inconsistencies between project work and requirements

  26. Time required to progress to next level Source: Based on Gartner Inc. (2001)

  27. Project Resources distribution Percentage of project resources

  28. Versions of CMMI (capability maturity model integration) • CMMI-SE/SW • System Engineering CMM (SE-CMM) • Software engineering CMM (SW-CMM) • CMMI-SE/SW/IPPD/SS • System Engineering CMM (SE-CMM) • Software engineering CMM (SW-CMM) • Integrated Product/Process Development (IPPD-CMM) • Supplier Sourcing • CMMI-SE/SW/IPPD • System Engineering CMM (SE-CMM) • Software engineering CMM (SW-CMM) • Integrated Product/Process Development (IPPD-CMM)

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