Home  |   Login  |   Logout  |   Access Information  |   Alerts  |   Purchase History  |   Cart  |   Sitemap  |   Help   
 
CrossRef Search
BROWSE SEARCH IEEE XPLORE GUIDE SUPPORT
You requested this document:
1. Handling obstacles in goal-oriented requirements engineering
van Lamsweerde, A.; Letier, E.;
Software Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
Volume 26,  Issue 10,  Oct. 2000 Page(s):978 - 1005
Abstract:

Requirements engineering is concerned with the elicitation of high-level goals to be achieved by the envisioned system, the refinement of such goals and their operationalization into specifications of services and constraints and the assignment of responsibilities for the resulting requirements to agents such as humans, devices and software. Requirements engineering processes often result in goals, requirements, and assumptions about agent behavior that are too ideal; some of them are likely not to be satisfied from time to time in the running system due to unexpected agent behavior. The lack of anticipation of exceptional behaviors results in unrealistic, unachievable, and/or incomplete requirements. As a consequence, the software developed from those requirements will not be robust enough and will inevitably result in poor performance or failures, sometimes with critical consequences on the environment. This paper presents formal techniques for reasoning about obstacles to the satisfaction of goals, requirements, and assumptions elaborated in the requirements engineering process. The techniques are based on a temporal logic formalization of goals and domain properties; they are integrated into an existing method for goal-oriented requirements elaboration with the aim of deriving more realistic, complete, and robust requirements specifications. A key principle is to handle exceptions at requirements engineering time and at the goal level, so that more freedom is left for resolving them in a satisfactory way. The various techniques proposed are illustrated and assessed in the context of a real safety-critical system
Abstract | Full Text: PDF(976 KB)    IEEE JNL
 
» Key
IEEE JNL IEEE Journal or Magazine
IEE JNL IEE Journal or Magazine
IEEE CNF IEEE Conference Proceeding
IEE CNF IEE Conference Proceeding
IEEE STD IEEE Standard
 
 
Indexed by IEE Inspec
© Copyright 2009 IEEE – All Rights Reserved