English

Scoping Software Process Models - Initial Concepts and Experience from Defining Space Standards

Software Engineering 2014-02-03 v1

Abstract

Defining process standards by integrating, harmonizing, and standardizing heterogeneous and often implicit processes is an important task, especially for large development organizations. However, many challenges exist, such as limiting the scope of process standards, coping with different levels of process model abstraction, and identifying relevant process variabilities to be included in the standard. On the one hand, eliminating process variability by building more abstract models with higher degrees of interpretation has many disadvantages, such as less control over the process. Integrating all kinds of variability, on the other hand, leads to high process deployment costs. This article describes requirements and concepts for determining the scope of process standards based on a characterization of the potential products to be produced in the future, the projects expected for the future, and the respective process capabilities needed. In addition, the article sketches experience from determining the scope of space process standards for satellite software development. Finally, related work with respect to process model scoping, conclusions, and an outlook on future work are presented.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1401.8072,
  title  = {Scoping Software Process Models - Initial Concepts and Experience from Defining Space Standards},
  author = {Ove Armbrust and Masafumi Katahira and Yuko Miyamoto and Jürgen Münch and Haruka Nakao and Alexis Ocampo},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1401.8072},
  year   = {2014}
}

Comments

13 pages. The final publication is available at http://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007%2F978-3-540-79588-9_15

R2 v1 2026-06-22T02:58:21.254Z