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Comparison and Assessment of Cost Models for NASA Flight Projects

Comparison and Assessment of Cost Models for NASA Flight Projects. Ray Madachy, Barry Boehm, Danni Wu {madachy, boehm, danwu}@usc.edu USC Center for Systems & Software Engineering http://csse.usc.edu 21 st International Forum on COCOMO and Software Cost Modeling November 8, 2006. Outline.

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Comparison and Assessment of Cost Models for NASA Flight Projects

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  1. Comparison and Assessment of Cost Models for NASA Flight Projects Ray Madachy, Barry Boehm, Danni Wu {madachy, boehm, danwu}@usc.edu USC Center for Systems & Software Engineering http://csse.usc.edu 21st International Forum on COCOMO and Software Cost Modeling November 8, 2006

  2. Outline • Introduction and background • Model comparison examples • Estimation performance analysis • Conclusions and future work

  3. Introduction • This work is sponsored by the NASA AMES project Software Risk Advisory Tools, Cooperative Agreement No. NNA06CB29A • Existing parametric software cost, schedule, and quality models are being assessed and updated for critical NASA flight projects • Includes a comparative survey of their strengths, limitations and suggested improvements • Developing transformations between the models • Accuracies and needs for calibration are being examined with relevant NASA project data • This presents the latest developments in ongoing research at the USC Center for Systems and Software Engineering (USC-CSSE) • Current work builds on previous research with NASA and the FAA

  4. Frequently Used Cost/Schedule Models for Critical Flight Software • COCOMO II is a public domain model that USC continually updates and is implemented in several commercial tools • SEER-SEM and TrueS are proprietary commercial models with unique features that also share some aspects with COCOMO • Include factors for project type and application domain • All three have been extensively used and tailored for flight project domains

  5. Support Acknowledgments • Galorath Inc. (SEER-SEM) • Dan Galorath, Tim Hohmann, Bob Hunt, Karen McRitchie • PRICE Systems (True S) • Arlene Minkiewicz, James Otte, David Seaver • Softstar Systems (COCOMO calibration) • Dan Ligett • Jet Propulsion Laboratories • Jairus Hihn, Sherry Stukes • NASA Software Risk Advisory Tools research team • Mike Lowry, Tim Menzies, Julian Richardson • This study was performed mostly by persons highly familiar with COCOMO but not necessarily with the vendor models. The vendors do not certify or sanction the data nor information contained in these charts.

  6. Approach • Develop “Rosetta Stone” transformations between the models so COCOMO inputs can be converted into corresponding inputs to the other models, or vice-versa • Crosscheck multiple estimation methods • Represent projects in a consistent manner in all models and to help understand why estimates may vary • Extensive discussions with model proprietors to clarify definitions • Models assessed against a common database of relevant projects • Using a database with effort, size and COCOMO cost factors for completed NASA projects called NASA 94 • Completion dates 1970s through late 1980s • Additional data as it comes in from NASA or other data collection initiatives • Analysis considerations • Calibration issues • Model deficiencies and extensions • Accuracy with relevant project data • Repeat analysis with updated calibrations, revised domain settings, improved models and new data

  7. Critical Factor Distributions by Project Type Reliability Complexity

  8. Outline • Introduction and background • Model comparison examples • Estimation performance analysis • Conclusions and future work

  9. Algorithms Size definitions New, reused, modified, COTS Language adjustments Cost factors Exponential, linear Work breakdown structure (WBS) and labor parameters Scope of activities and phases covered Hours per person-month Cost Model Comparison Attributes

  10. Size Cost Factors Effort = A * Size B * EMEffort Phase and Activity Calibrations Decomposition Common Effort Formula • Effort in person-months • A - calibrated constant • B - scale factor • EM - effort multiplier from cost factors

  11. Example: Top-Level Rosetta Stone for COCOMO II Factors (1/3)

  12. Example: Top-Level Rosetta Stone for COCOMO II Factors (2/3)

  13. Example: Top-Level Rosetta Stone for COCOMO II Factors (3/3)

  14. Example: Model Size Inputs 1 - Not applicable for reused software2 - Specified separately for Designed for Reuse and Not Designed for Reuse

  15. Example: SEER Factors with No Direct COCOMO II Mapping PRODUCT REUSABILITY • Software Impacted by Reuse DEVELOPMENT ENVIRONMENT COMPLEXITY • Language Type (Complexity) • Host Development System Complexity • Application Class Complexity 3 • Process Improvement TARGET ENVIRONMENT • Special Display Requirements • Real Time Code • Security Requirements PERSONNEL CAPABILITIES AND EXPERIENCE • Practices and Methods Experience DEVELOPMENT SUPPORT ENVIRONMENT • Modern Development Practices • Logon thru Hardcopy Turnaround • Terminal Response Time • Resource Dedication • Resource and Support Location • Process Volatility PRODUCT DEVELOPMENT REQUIREMENTS • Requirements Volatility (Change) 1 • Test Level 2 • Quality Assurance Level 2 • Rehost from Development to Target 1 – COCOMO II uses the Requirements Evolution and Volatility size adjustment factor 2 – Captured in the COCOMO II Required Software Reliability factor 3 – Captured in the COCOMO II Complexity factor

  16. Vendor Elaborations of Critical Domain Factors * SEER factors supplemented with and may be impacted via knowledge base settings for • Platform • Application • Acquisition method • Development method • Development standard • Class • Component type (COTS only)

  17. SEER-SEM Reusability Level XH = Across organization VH = Across product line H = Across project N = No requirements Software Impacted by Reuse (% reusable) 100% 50% 25% 0%- COCOMO II XH = Across multiple product lines VH = Across product line H = Across program N = Across project L = None Example: Required Reusability Mapping • Cost to develop software module for subsequent reuse • SEER-SEM to COCOMO II: • XH = XH in COCOMO II 100% reuse level = 1.50 50% reuse level = 1.40 25% reuse level = 1.32 0% reuse level = 1.25 • VH = VH in COCOMO II 100% reuse level = 1.32 50% reuse level = 1.26 25% reuse level = 1.22 0% reuse level = 1.16 • H = N in COCOMO II • N = L in COCOMO II

  18. Example: WBS Mapping

  19. Example: Model Normalization

  20. Outline • Introduction and background • Model comparison examples • Estimation performance analysis • Conclusions and future work

  21. Model Analysis Flow Not all steps performed on iterations 2-n SEER-SEM COCOMO II True S

  22. Performance Measures • For each model, compare actual and estimated effort for n projects in a dataset: Relative Error (RE) = ( Estimated Effort – Actual Effort ) / Actual Effort Magnitude of Relative Error (MRE) = | Estimated Effort – Actual Effort | / Actual Effort Mean Magnitude of relative error (MMRE) = (MRE) / n Root Mean Square (RMS) = ((1/n)  (Estimated Effort – Actual Effort)2) ½ Prediction level PRED(L) = k / n where k = the number projects in a set of n projects whose MRE <= L.

  23. COCOMO II Performance Examples MMRE Calibration Effect PRED(40) Calibration Effect

  24. SEER-SEM Performance Examples MMRE Progressive Adjustment Effects PRED(40) Progressive Adjustment Effects

  25. Model Performance Summaries For Flight Projects

  26. Outline • Introduction and background • Model comparison examples • Estimation performance analysis • Conclusions and future work

  27. Vendor Concerns • Study limited to a COCOMO viewpoint only • Current Rosetta Stones need review and may be weak translators from the original data • Results not indicative of model performance due to ignored parameters • Risk and uncertainty were ground ruled out • Data sanity checking needed

  28. Conclusions (1/2) • All cost models (COCOMO II, SEER-SEM, True S) performed well against NASA database of critical flight software • Calibration and knowledge base settings improved default model performance • Estimate performance varies by domain subset • Complexity and reliability factor distributions characterize the domains as expected • SEER-SEM and True S vendor models provide additional factors beyond COCOMO II • More granular factors for the overall effects captured in the COCOMO II Complexity factor. • Additional factors for other aspects, many of which are relevant for NASA projects • Some difficulties mapping inputs between models, but simplifications are possible • Reconciliation of effort WBS necessary for valid comparison between models

  29. Conclusions (2/2) • Models exhibited nearly equivalent performance trends for embedded flight projects within the different subgroups • Initial uncalibrated runs from COCOMO II and SEER-SEM both underestimated the projects by approximately 50% overall • Improvement trends between uncalibrated estimates and those with calibrations or knowledge base refinements were almost identical • SEER experiments illustrated that model performance measures markedly improved when incorporating knowledge base information for the domains • All three models have roughly the same final performance measures for either individual flight groups or combined • In practice no one model should be preferred over all others • Use a variety of methods and tools and then investigate why the estimates may vary

  30. Future Work • Study has been helpful in reducing sources of misinterpretation across the models but considerably more should be done * • Developing two-way and/or multiple-way Rosetta Stones • Explicit identification of residual sources of uncertainty across models and their estimates not fully addressable by Rosetta Stones • Factors unique to some models but not others • Many-to-many factor mappings • Partial factor-to-factor mappings • Similar factors that affect estimates in different ways: linear, multiplicative, exponential, other • Imperfections in data: subjective rating scales, code counting, counting of other size factors, effort/schedule counting, endpoint definitions and interpretations, WBS element definitions and interpretations • Repeating the analysis with improved models, new data and updated Rosetta Stones • COCOMO II may be revised for critical flight project applications • Improved analysis process • Revision of vendor tool usage to set knowledge bases before COCOMO translation parameter setting • Capture estimate inputs in all three model formats; try different translation directionalities • With modern and more comprehensive data, COCOMO II and other models can be further improved and tailored for NASA project usage • Additional data always welcome * The study participants welcome sponsorship of further joint efforts to pin down sources of uncertainty, and to more explicitly identify the limits to comparing estimates across models

  31. Bibliography • Boehm B, Abts C, Brown A, Chulani S, Clark B, Horowitz E, Madachy R, Reifer D, Steece B, Software Cost Estimation with COCOMO II, Prentice-Hall, 2000 • Boehm B, Abts C, Chulani S, Software Development Cost Estimation Approaches – A Survey, USC-CSE-00-505, 2000 • Galorath Inc., SEER-SEM User Manual, 2005 • Lum K, Powell J, Hihn J, Validation of Spacecraft Software Cost Estimation Models for Flight and Ground Systems, JPL Technical Report, 2001 • Madachy R, Boehm B, Wu D, Comparison and Assessment of Cost Models for NASA Flight Projects, http://sunset.usc.edu/csse/TECHRPTS/2006/usccse2006-616/usccse-2006-616.pdf, USC Center for Systems and Software Engineering Technical Report USC-CSSE-2006-616, 2006 • PRICE Systems, True S User Manual, 2005 • Reifer D, Boehm B, Chulani S, The Rosetta Stone - Making COCOMO 81 Estimates Work with COCOMO II, Crosstalk, 1999

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