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BS ISO/IEC/IEEE 12207:2017:2018 Edition

$215.11

Systems and software engineering. Software life cycle processes

Published By Publication Date Number of Pages
BSI 2018 158
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1.1 Overview

This document establishes a common framework for software life cycle processes, with well-defined terminology, that can be referenced by the software industry. It contains processes, activities, and tasks that are applicable during the acquisition, supply, development, operation, maintenance or disposal of software systems, products, and services. These life cycle processes are accomplished through the involvement of stakeholders, with the ultimate goal of achieving customer satisfaction.

This document applies to the acquisition, supply, development, operation, maintenance, and disposal (whether performed internally or externally to an organization) of software systems, products and services, and the software portion of any system, Software includes the software portion of firmware. Those aspects of system definition needed to provide the context for software products and services are included.

This document also provides processes that can be employed for defining, controlling, and improving software life cycle processes within an organization or a project.

The processes, activities, and tasks of this document can also be applied during the acquisition of a system that contains software, either alone or in conjunction with ISO/IEC/IEEE 15288:2015, Systems and software engineering—System life cycle processes.

In the context of this document and ISO/IEC/IEEE 15288, there is a continuum of human-made systems from those that use little or no software to those in which software is the primary interest. It is rare to encounter a complex system without software, and all software systems require physical system components (hardware) to operate, either as part of the software system-of-interest or as an enabling system or infrastructure. Thus, the choice of whether to apply this document for the software life cycle processes, or ISO/IEC/IEEE 15288:2015, Systems and software engineering—System life cycle processes, depends on the system-of-interest. Processes in both documents have the same process purpose and process outcomes, but differ in activities and tasks to perform software engineering or systems engineering, respectively.

1.2 Purpose

The purpose of this document is to provide a defined set of processes to facilitate communication among acquirers, suppliers and other stakeholders in the life cycle of a software system.

This document is written for acquirers, suppliers, developers, integrators, operators, maintainers, managers, quality assurance managers, and users of software systems, products, and services. It can be used by a single organization in a self-imposed mode or in a multi-party situation. Parties can be from the same organization or from different organizations and the situation can range from an informal agreement to a formal contract.

The processes in this document can be used as a basis for establishing business environments, e.g., methods, procedures, techniques, tools and trained personnel. Annex A provides normative direction regarding the tailoring of these software life cycle processes.

1.3 Field of application

This document applies to the full life cycle of software systems, products, and services, including conception, development, production, utilization, support and retirement, and to their acquisition and supply, whether performed internally or externally to an organization. The life cycle processes of this document can be applied concurrently, iteratively and recursively to a software system and incrementally to its elements.

There is a wide variety of software systems in terms of their purpose, domain of application, complexity, size, novelty, adaptability, quantities, locations, life spans and evolution. This document describes the processes that comprise the life cycle of man-made software systems. It therefore applies to one-of-a-kind software systems, software systems for wide commercial or public distribution, and customized, adaptable software systems. It also applies to a complete stand-alone software system and to software systems that are embedded and integrated into larger, more complex and complete systems.

This document provides a process reference model characterized in terms of the process purpose and the process outcomes that result from the successful execution of the activity tasks. Annex B lists examples of artifacts and information items that may be associated with various processes. This document can therefore be used as a reference model to support process assessment as specified in ISO/IEC 33002:2015. Annex C provides information regarding the use of the software life cycle processes as a process reference model. Annex D describes the process constructs for use in the process reference model. Annex I provides the correspondence between this document and ISO/IEC/IEEE 12207:2008 at the level of process name and process outcome.

1.4 Limitations

This document does not prescribe a specific software life cycle model, development methodology, method, modelling approach, or technique. The users of this document are responsible for selecting a life cycle model for the project and mapping the processes, activities, and tasks in this document into that model. The parties are also responsible for selecting and applying appropriate methodologies, methods, models and techniques suitable for the project.

This document does not establish a management system or require the use of any management system standard. However, it is intended to be compatible with the quality management system specified by ISO 9001, the service management system specified by ISO/IEC 20000‑1 (IEEE Std 20000‑1), and the information security management system specified by ISO/IEC 27000.

This document does not detail information items in terms of name, format, explicit content and recording media. ISO/IEC/IEEE 15289 addresses the content for life cycle process information items (documentation).

PDF Catalog

PDF Pages PDF Title
2 undefined
8 Foreword
9 Introduction
10 1 Scope
1.1 Overview
1.2 Purpose
1.3 Field of application
11 1.4 Limitations
2 Normative references
3 Terms, definitions, and abbreviated terms
3.1 Terms and definitions
20 3.2 Abbreviated terms
4 Conformance
4.1 Intended usage
21 4.2 Full conformance
4.2.1 Full conformance to outcomes
4.2.2 Full conformance to tasks
4.3 Tailored conformance
22 5 Key concepts and application
5.1 Introduction
5.2 Software system concepts
5.2.1 Software systems
5.2.2 Software system structure
24 5.2.3 Enabling systems
25 5.2.4 Life cycle processes for the software system
5.3 Organization and project concepts
5.3.1 Organizations
26 5.3.2 Organization and project-level adoption
5.4 Life cycle concepts
5.4.1 Software life cycle stages
5.4.2 Life cycle model for the software system
28 5.5 Process concepts
5.5.1 Criteria for processes
5.5.2 Description of processes
5.5.3 General characteristics of processes
5.5.4 Tailoring
5.6 Process groups
5.6.1 Introduction
30 5.6.2 Agreement processes
31 5.6.3 Organizational project-enabling processes
5.6.4 Technical Management processes
5.6.5 Technical processes
5.7 Process application
32 5.8 Process reference model
33 6 Software life cycle processes
6.1 Agreement processes
6.1.1 Acquisition process
6.1.1.1 Purpose
6.1.1.2 Outcomes
6.1.1.3 Activities and tasks
36 6.1.2 Supply process
6.1.2.1 Purpose
6.1.2.2 Outcomes
6.1.2.3 Activities and tasks
37 6.2 Organizational Project-Enabling processes
38 6.2.1 Life cycle model management process
6.2.1.1 Purpose
6.2.1.2 Outcomes
6.2.1.3 Activities and tasks
39 6.2.2 Infrastructure Management process
6.2.2.1 Purpose
40 6.2.2.2 Outcomes
6.2.2.3 Activities and tasks
6.2.3 Portfolio Management process
6.2.3.1 Purpose
41 6.2.3.2 Outcomes
6.2.3.3 Activities and tasks
42 6.2.4 Human Resource Management process
6.2.4.1 Purpose
6.2.4.2 Outcomes
43 6.2.4.3 Activities and tasks
6.2.5 Quality Management process
6.2.5.1 Purpose
6.2.5.2 Outcomes
44 6.2.5.3 Activities and tasks
45 6.2.6 Knowledge Management process
6.2.6.1 Purpose
6.2.6.2 Outcomes
6.2.6.3 Activities and tasks
46 6.3 Technical Management processes
47 6.3.1 Project Planning process
6.3.1.1 Purpose
6.3.1.2 Outcomes
48 6.3.1.3 Activities and tasks
49 6.3.2 Project assessment and control process
6.3.2.1 Purpose
50 6.3.2.2 Outcomes
6.3.2.3 Activities and tasks
52 6.3.3 Decision Management process
6.3.3.1 Purpose
6.3.3.2 Outcomes
6.3.3.3 Activities and tasks
53 6.3.4 Risk Management process
6.3.4.1 Purpose
6.3.4.2 Outcomes
54 6.3.4.3 Activities and tasks
55 6.3.5 Configuration Management process
6.3.5.1 Purpose
6.3.5.2 Outcomes
56 6.3.5.3 Activities and tasks
59 6.3.6 Information Management process
6.3.6.1 Purpose
6.3.6.2 Outcomes
60 6.3.6.3 Activities and tasks
61 6.3.7 Measurement process
6.3.7.1 Purpose
6.3.7.2 Outcomes
6.3.7.3 Activities and tasks
62 6.3.8 Quality Assurance process
6.3.8.1 Purpose
6.3.8.2 Outcomes
6.3.8.3 Activities and tasks
64 6.4 Technical processes
65 6.4.1 Business or Mission Analysis process
6.4.1.1 Purpose
66 6.4.1.2 Outcomes
6.4.1.3 Activities and tasks
68 6.4.2 Stakeholder Needs and Requirements Definition process
6.4.2.1 Purpose
6.4.2.2 Outcomes
6.4.2.3 Activities and tasks
72 6.4.3 System/Software requirements definition process
6.4.3.1 Purpose
6.4.3.2 Outcomes
6.4.3.3 Activities and tasks
75 6.4.4 Architecture Definition process
6.4.4.1 Purpose
76 6.4.4.2 Outcomes
6.4.4.3 Activities and tasks
80 6.4.5 Design Definition process
6.4.5.1 Purpose
6.4.5.2 Outcomes
6.4.5.3 Activities and tasks
83 6.4.6 System Analysis process
6.4.6.1 Purpose
6.4.6.2 Outcomes
6.4.6.3 Activities and tasks
84 6.4.7 Implementation process
6.4.7.1 Purpose
85 6.4.7.2 Outcomes
6.4.7.3 Activities and tasks
88 6.4.8 Integration process
6.4.8.1 Purpose
6.4.8.2 Outcomes
6.4.8.3 Activities and tasks
91 6.4.9 Verification process
6.4.9.1 Purpose
6.4.9.2 Outcomes
92 6.4.9.3 Activities and tasks
94 6.4.10 Transition process
6.4.10.1 Purpose
6.4.10.2 Outcomes
95 6.4.10.3 Activities and tasks
98 6.4.11 Validation process
6.4.11.1 Purpose
6.4.11.2 Outcomes
99 6.4.11.3 Activities and tasks
101 6.4.12 Operation process
6.4.12.1 Purpose
6.4.12.2 Outcomes
6.4.12.3 Activities and tasks
104 6.4.13 Maintenance process
6.4.13.1 Purpose
105 6.4.13.2 Outcomes
6.4.13.3 Activities and tasks
108 6.4.14 Disposal process
6.4.14.1 Purpose
109 6.4.14.2 Outcomes
6.4.14.3 Activities and tasks
111 Annex A
113 Annex B
116 Annex C
118 Annex D
120 Annex E
129 Annex F
132 Annex G
136 Annex H
138 Annex I
BS ISO/IEC/IEEE 12207:2017
$215.11