Safety-Critical Systems and Agile Development: A Mapping Study
Abstract
In the last decades, agile methods had a huge impact on how software is developed. In many cases, this has led to significant benefits, such as quality and speed of software deliveries to customers. However, safety-critical systems have widely been dismissed from benefiting from agile methods. Products that include safety critical aspects are therefore faced with a situation in which the development of safety-critical parts can significantly limit the potential speed-up through agile methods, for the full product, but also in the non-safety critical parts. For such products, the ability to develop safety-critical software in an agile way will generate a competitive advantage. In order to enable future research in this important area, we present in this paper a mapping of the current state of practice based on {a mixed method approach}. Starting from a workshop with experts from six large Swedish product development companies we develop a lens for our analysis. We then present a systematic mapping study on safety-critical systems and agile development through this lens in order to map potential benefits, challenges, and solution candidates for guiding future research.
Cite
@article{arxiv.1807.07800,
title = {Safety-Critical Systems and Agile Development: A Mapping Study},
author = {Rashidah Kasauli and Eric Knauss and Benjamin Kanagwa and Agneta Nilsson and Gul Calikli},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1807.07800},
year = {2018}
}
Comments
Accepted at Euromicro Conf. on Software Engineering and Advanced Applications 2018, Prague, Czech Republic