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Quality Leadership Forum

Quality Leadership Forum. Software Quality Assurance at GSFC Dr. Linda H. Rosenberg Chief Scientist for Software Assurance Office of Systems Safety and Mission Assurance 301-286-0087 Linda.Rosenberg@gsfc.nasa.gov. Discussion Areas. NASA Software Activities Software Working Group

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Quality Leadership Forum

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  1. Quality Leadership Forum • Software Quality Assurance at GSFC • Dr. Linda H. Rosenberg • Chief Scientist for Software Assurance • Office of Systems Safety and Mission Assurance • 301-286-0087 • Linda.Rosenberg@gsfc.nasa.gov Mission Success Begins With Safety

  2. Discussion Areas • NASA Software Activities • Software Working Group • NASA Software Initiative Implementation Plan • GSFC Software Assurance Activities • Software Process Improvement – CMMI • Software Safety and Reliability • Software Quality Metrics • IV&V Mission Success Begins With Safety

  3. NASA’s Software Working Group Mission Success Begins With Safety

  4. SWG Initial Tasks • 1 - Define criteria for use of IV&V on a project • 2 - Standards evaluation • Review IEEE 12207 for potential NASA use • Review draft of NPG 2820 • Review draft NPD for IV&V • 3 - Prepare a plan for improving software process • Implementation of software metrics program • Implementation of process improvement model • Establishment of Center Software Engineering Process Groups (SEPG) Mission Success Begins With Safety

  5. SWG Task 3 - Metrics • Set of metrics finalized summer 2000 • Objectives • Provide project managers with usable information • Provide agency with information on software trends • Provide a measure to assess improvement • 2 test projects per Center started Fall 2000 for 1 year • (GSFC projects AURA & AQUA) • Developing database for metrics entry and analysis Mission Success Begins With Safety

  6. NASA Software Initiative Implementation Plan • Goal: Advance software engineering practices (development, assurance, and management) to effectively deliver the scientific and technological objectives of NASA. • Strategies: • 1. Develop and implement Agency-wide and Center plans for continuous software process and product improvement in NASA and Contractor developed software; also establish infrastructure and measurement system • 2. Improve safety, reliability, and quality of software products through the integration of sound software engineering principles and standards. • 3. Provide input for research based on identified software problem areas and infuse research results • 4. Improve software engineering knowledge base in NASA, and implement strategies for attracting, retaining software engineers Mission Success Begins With Safety

  7. GSFC Software Assurance Activities Mission Success Begins With Safety

  8. GSFC Software Development Process Improvement • Purpose - improving the processes and practices in use at GSFC using the Capability Maturity Model Integrated (CMMI) levels of maturity (ML) as a measure of progress. • Scope - process improvement effort that will be undertaken with the goal of raising GSFC from its current state to a CMMI Defined maturity level (L3). All projects defined by NPG 7120.5 or otherwise identified by GSFC’s Center Director will participate in this effort. Mission Success Begins With Safety

  9. Capability Maturity Model Integrated (CMMI) GOAL Level Process Areas Organization innovation and deployment Causal analysis and resolution Organizational process performance Quantitative project management Requirements development Technical solution Product integration Verification Validation Organizational process focus Organizational process definition Organizational training Integrated project management Risk management Decision analysis and resolution Requirements management Project planning Project monitoring and control Supplier agreement management Measurement and analysis 5 Optimizing 4 Quantitatively Managed 3 Defined 2 Managed 1 Initial Software Development SW Systems SE CMMI Software Acquisition SA For Pilots: Emphasis - SW CMM As appropriate - SE CMM SA CMM GSFC Mission Success Begins With Safety

  10. Pilot Project Selection Project W Project X Project Y Project Z FLT SW GND SW FLT SW GND SW GND SW FLT SW FLT SW GND SW Instr 2 Instr 1 Instr 2 Instr 1 Instr 2 Instr 1 Instr 2 Instr 1 Mission Success Begins With Safety

  11. Schedule • GSFC Implementation plan to HQ July 2001 • Management Oversight Group • Member identification July 2001 • Initial meeting August 2001 • Training in CMMI September (1/2 day or 3 day option) • Engineering Process Group • Member identification July 2001 • Training in CMMI September 2001(3 day course) • Training in Risk Management October 2001 • Pilot Implementation • Pilot identification by October 1, 2001 • Pilot study complete October 1, 2002 • Evaluation of Pilot and roll out January 1, 2003 Mission Success Begins With Safety

  12. What is meant by “safety” • A system/product is Safewhen: • There is little to no chance for it to blow up, break, malfunction, or otherwise fail in such a way as to potentially injure someone • Something is Critical when there is a potential for: • Serious injury or death • Serious impact to the bottom line, or • Bad publicity, public reputation • Vital information is accessible to the wrong folks • A system/product is Not Safe when: • Someone could die or be seriously injured • NASA includes possible destruction of vital equipment as well Mission Success Begins With Safety

  13. Standards • NASA Standards (http://standards.nasa.gov/sitemap.htm) • NPG 8715.3 NASA Safety Manual • NSTS-1700-7B Safety Policy and Requirements for Payloads (Shuttle and ISS) • NASA-STD-8719.13A NASA Software Safety Standard • NASA-GB-A302 Software Formal Inspections Guidebook • NSTS-22254 Methodology for Conduct of Space Shuttle Program Hazard Analyses • SSP-50038 Computer-Based Control System Safety Requirements, ISS Program • NPD/NPG 8730 “NASA IV&V Processes “ • IEEE Standards • IEEE 12207 Information Technology - Software Life Cycle Processes • IEEE 830-1998 Recommended Practice for Software Requirements Specifications • IEEE 1016-1998 Recommended Practice for Software Design Descriptions • IEEE 1228-1994 Standard for Software Safety Plans • Other Standards • MIL-STD-882D System Safety Program Requirements (C version January 19, 1993) • DO-178B Software Considerations in Airborne Systems and Equipment Certification (Federal Aviation Administration). • ISO 9000-3 Guidelines For The Application Of ISO 9001 To The Development, Supply, Installation And Maintenance Of Computer Software Mission Success Begins With Safety

  14. Software Reliability • The probability that software will not cause the failure of a system for a specified time under specified conditions. The probability is a function of the inputs to and use of the system, as well as a function of the existence of faults in the software. The inputs to the system determine whether existing faults, if any, are encountered. [AIAA] [IEEE 982] • IEEE 982.1-1988 Software Reliability Management : “The process of optimizing the reliability of software through a program that emphasizes software error prevention, fault detection and removal, and the use of measurements to maximize reliability in light of project constraints such as resources, schedule and performance.” Mission Success Begins With Safety

  15. Hardware vs. Software Reliability Integration Useful Life Obsolete & test Burn in Useful Life Wear out Hardware Failure Rate Software Failure Rate Hardware reliability == Software reliability Mission Success Begins With Safety

  16. Definitions: Safe vs. Reliable • A system is: • safe if it doesn’t kill anyone, or the system itself, while either performing its normal operations or, when unable to perform correctly, “fails-safe” . • reliable if it performs the required functions within specified parameters/environment and within predicted working timeframe consistently • Some consider Software to be very reliable, in that it does just what its programmed to do, over and over and over again. It doesn’t wear out or ‘break’. However, Linda will give you the real picture on Software reliability! Mission Success Begins With Safety

  17. How Do We Assure / Measure Software Quality? • How much testing is necessary? • How hard is it to fix the components? • Can I reuse any components? • What is the quality and complexity of the code? Requirements • Can you test the requirements? • Are the requirements complete? • Are you testing each requirement? Design Coding Testing How many errors still remain? What is the reliability? When can I stop testing? Mission Success Begins With Safety

  18. IV&V Approach Traditional Software Development V&V Req Design Code Test (Verification & Validation) Unit Integration Acceptance Req Design Code Testing Unit Clean Room Approach iV&V Test (Verification & Validation) Integration Acceptance Req Design Code Test (Verification & Validation) Unit Integration Acceptance IV&V IV&V Implementation Mission Success Begins With Safety

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