Lesson 4 Software Engineering
Lesson 4 Software Engineering
ENGINEERING
FUNCTIONAL AND NON FUNCTIONAL
Outline
The process of establishing the services that the customer requires from a
system and the constraints under which it operates and is developed.
The requirements themselves are the descriptions of the system services and
constraints that are generated during the requirements engineering process.
What is a requirement?
User requirements
Statements in natural language plus diagrams of the services the system provides and
its operational constraints. Written for customers.
System requirements
A structured document setting out detailed descriptions of the system’s functions,
services and operational constraints. Defines what should be implemented so may be
part of a contract between client and contractor.
User and system requirements
Readers of different types of requirements
specification
Functional and non-functional
requirements
Functional requirements
Statements of services the system should provide, how the system should react to
particular inputs and how the system should behave in particular situations.
May state what the system should not do.
Non-functional requirements
Constraints on the services or functions offered by the system such as timing
constraints, constraints on the development process, standards, etc.
Often apply to the system as a whole rather than individual features or services.
Functional requirements
A user shall be able to search the appointments lists for all clinics.
The system shall generate each day, for each clinic, a list of patients who are
expected to attend appointments that day.
Each staff member using the system shall be uniquely identified by his or her 8-
digit employee number.
Requirements imprecision
These define system properties and constraints e.g. reliability, response time,
and storage requirements. Constraints are I/O device capability, system
representations, etc.
Process requirements may also be specified mandating a particular IDE,
programming language or development method.
Non-functional requirements may be more critical than functional requirements. If
these are not met, the system may be useless.
Types of nonfunctional requirement
Implementation
Product requirements
Requirements which specify that the delivered product must behave in a particular way
e.g. execution speed, reliability, etc.
Organizational requirements
Requirements which are a consequence of organizational policies and procedures e.g.
process standards used, implementation requirements, etc.
External requirements
Requirements which arise from factors which are external to the system and its
development process, e.g. interoperability requirements, legislative requirements, etc.
Examples:
Product requirement
The MHC-PMS shall be available to all clinics during normal working hours (Mon–Fri, 0830–
17.30). Downtime within normal working hours shall not exceed five seconds in any one
day.
Organizational requirement
Users of the MHC-PMS system shall authenticate themselves using their health authority
identity card.
External requirement
The system shall implement patient privacy provisions as set out in HStan-03-2006-priv.
Goals and requirements
The system should be easy to use by medical staff and should be organized in
such a way that user errors are minimized. (Goal)
Medical staff shall be able to use all the system functions after four hours of
training. After this training, the average number of errors made by experienced
users shall not exceed two per hour of system use. (Testable non-functional
requirement)
Metrics for non-functional requirements
Domain requirements
Understandability
Requirements are expressed in the language of the application domain;
This is often not understood by software engineers developing the system.
Implicitness
Domain specialists understand the area so well that they do not think of making the
domain requirements explicit.
Agile methods and requirements
The process of writing down the user and system requirements in a requirements
document
User requirements have to be understandable by end-users and customers who
do not have a technical background
System requirements are more detailed requirements and may include more
technical information
The requirements may be part of a contract for the system development
It is therefore important that these are as complete as possible
Ways of writing a system requirements
specification
Requirements and design
In principle, requirements should state what the system should do and the design
should describe how it does this.
In practice, requirements and design are inseparable
A system architecture may be designed to structure the requirements;
The system may inter-operate with other systems that generate design requirements;
The use of a specific architecture to satisfy non-functional requirements may be a
domain requirement.
This may be the consequence of a regulatory requirement.
Natural language specification
3.2 The system shall measure the blood sugar and deliver insulin, if required, every 10
minutes. (Changes in blood sugar are relatively slow so more frequent measurement is
unnecessary; less frequent measurement could lead to unnecessarily high sugar levels.)
3.6 The system shall run a self-test routine every minute with the conditions to be tested
and the associated actions defined in Table 1. (A self-test routine can discover hardware and
software problems and alert the user to the fact the normal operation may be impossible.)
Requirements engineering processes
The processes used for RE vary widely depending on the application domain, the
people involved and the organisation developing the requirements.
However, there are a number of generic activities common to all processes
Requirements elicitation;
Requirements analysis;
Requirements validation;
Requirements management.
In practice, RE is an iterative activity in which these processes are interleaved.
Requirements elicitation and analysis
Software engineers work with a range of system stakeholders to find out about
the application domain, the services that the system should provide, the required
system performance, hardware constraints, other systems, etc
The requirements elicitation
Methods for requirements
gathering/discovery
Interview
Use case
Observations
Literature study
Interview
Use-cases are a scenario based technique in the UML which identify the actors in
an interaction and which describe the interaction itself.
A set of use cases should describe all possible interactions with the system.
Sequence diagrams may be used to add detail to use-cases by showing the
sequence of event processing in the system.
Use cases for the MHC-PMS
Ethnography
Concerned with demonstrating that the requirements define the system that the
customer really wants.
Requirements error costs are high so validation is very important
Fixing a requirements error after delivery may cost up to 100 times the cost of fixing an
implementation error.
How to validate?
Validity. Does the system provide the functions which best support the customer’s
needs?
Consistency. Are there any requirements conflicts?
Completeness. Are all functions required by the customer included?
Realism. Can the requirements be implemented given available budget and
technology
Verifiability. Can the requirements be checked?
Properties of a good requirement
Verifiability
Is the requirement realistically testable?
Comprehensibility
Is the requirement properly understood?
Traceability
Is the origin of the requirement clearly stated?
Adaptability
Can the requirement be changed without a large impact on other requirements?
Requirements Management
The business and technical environment of the system always changes after installation.
New hardware may be introduced, it may be necessary to interface the system with other systems,
business priorities may change (with consequent changes in the system support required), and new
legislation and regulations may be introduced that the system must necessarily abide by.
The people who pay for a system and the users of that system are rarely the same people.
System customers impose requirements because of organizational and budgetary constraints.
These may conflict with end-user requirements and, after delivery, new features may have to be
added for user support if the system is to meet its goals.
Large systems usually have a diverse user community, with many users having different
requirements and priorities that may be conflicting or contradictory.
The final system requirements are inevitably a compromise between them and, with experience, it is
often discovered that the balance of support given to different users has to be changed.
Overview of SRS document