Proceedings

Proceedings
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 344
Release: 1997
Genre: Software engineering
ISBN:

Third IEEE International Software Engineering Standards Symposium and Forum (ISESS 97)

Third IEEE International Software Engineering Standards Symposium and Forum (ISESS 97)
Author:
Publisher: IEEE Computer Society Press
Total Pages: 340
Release: 1997
Genre: Computers
ISBN:

The proceedings from the June 1997 conference focusing on the effectiveness of software engineering standards and their future, particularly in respect to critical systems. The 35 selected tutorials, technical papers, panel discussions and workshops deal with aspects of software safety and compliance, identifying software users, software product measurement, software and systems engineering fundamental principles, and formal methods. The keynote address features cautionary advice to standards writers engaged with the limited claims that can be made for software dependability. Lacks an index. Annotation copyrighted by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR.

Experience with the Management of Software Projects, 1995, (MSP '95)

Experience with the Management of Software Projects, 1995, (MSP '95)
Author: P. Elzer
Publisher: Pergamon
Total Pages: 136
Release: 1996
Genre: Computers
ISBN:

These proceedings contain the papers presented at the 5th IFAC/IFIP/GI/GMA Workshop on Experience with the Management of Software Projects (MSP '95) held in Karlsruhe, Germany, 27-29 September 1995. Emphasis was placed on technical aspects, but new aspects of the software life cycle also appeared. Among the technical issues, it would seem that test methods are seeing a revival and simulation and modelling techniques are starting to be used for the project management process proper. Within the software development life cycle, re-use and reverse engineering have become established components and reports on experience with the application of formal approaches are becoming more distinct. An important topic covered was configuration mangement - the more common it becomes for software to be developed as a system of components having individual life cycles rather than as one consistent piece, then the more important it is to have methods for administering such components separately whilst still enabling the designer to build consistent systems out of them. The workshop overall was rated better than average by participants and a good percentage of papers were recommended for publication in a journal. It can also be said that the workshop reflected the improvement in technology transfer time in software and the coming of age of software engineering in general.

Cleanroom Software Engineering

Cleanroom Software Engineering
Author: Stacy J. Prowell
Publisher: Pearson Education
Total Pages: 412
Release: 1999-03-09
Genre: Computers
ISBN: 0768685117

Cleanroom software engineering is a process for developing and certifying high-reliability software. Combining theory-based engineering technologies in project management, incremental development, software specification and design, correctness verification, and statistical quality certification, the Cleanroom process answers today's call for more reliable software and provides methods for more cost-effective software development. Cleanroom originated with Harlan D. Mills, an IBM Fellow and a visionary in software engineering. Written by colleagues of Mills and some of the most experienced developers and practitioners of Cleanroom, Cleanroom Software Engineering provides a roadmap for software management, development, and testing as disciplined engineering practices. This book serves both as an introduction for those new to Cleanroom and as a reference guide for the growing practitioner community. Readers will discover a proven way to raise both quality and productivity in their software-intensive products, while reducing costs. Highlights Explains basic Cleanroom theory Introduces the sequence-based specification method Elaborates the full management, development, and certification process in a Cleanroom Reference Model (CRM) Shows how the Cleanroom process dovetails with the SEI's Capability Maturity Model for Software (CMM) Includes a large case study to illustrate how Cleanroom methods scale up to large projects.