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IP Template SRS

This is a template for your upcoming projects

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Laxmi Khemka
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
57 views6 pages

IP Template SRS

This is a template for your upcoming projects

Uploaded by

Laxmi Khemka
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Department of Computer Science & Engineering

Software Requirements
Specification
for

<Integrated Project-I>
Institute/ School Name School of Engineering and Technology

Department Name Department of Computer Science & Engineering

Program Name Bachelor of Engineering (Computer Science & Engineering)

Course Code 23IP001 Course Name Integrated Project- I

Team Member 1 ID Team Member 2 ID

Team Member 3 ID Team Member 4 ID


Table of Contents
Table of Contents....................................................................................................................... ii
1. Introduction.......................................................................................................................... 1
1.1 Purpose...................................................................................................................................... 1
1.2 Document Conventions..............................................................................................................1
1.3 Intended Audience and Reading Suggestions..............................................................................1
1.4 Project Scope..............................................................................................................................1
1.5 References..................................................................................................................................1
2. Overall Description.............................................................................................................. 2
2.1 Product Perspective....................................................................................................................2
2.2 Product Features.........................................................................................................................2
2.3 User Classes and Characteristics.................................................................................................2
2.4 Operating Environment...............................................................................................................2
3. System Features................................................................................................................... 3
3.1 System Feature 1........................................................................................................................3
3.2 System Feature 2 (and so on)......................................................................................................4
4. External Interface Requirements........................................................................................ 4
4.1 User Interfaces............................................................................................................................4
4.2 Hardware Interfaces....................................................................................................................4
4.3 Software Interfaces.....................................................................................................................4

5. Other Requirements............................................................................................................. 5
Appendix A: Glossary................................................................................................................ 5
Appendix B: Analysis Models.................................................................................................... 6
1. Introduction

1.1 Purpose
<Identify the product whose software requirements are specified in this document, including the
revision or release number. Describe the scope of the product that is covered by this SRS,
particularly if this SRS describes only part of the system or a single subsystem.>

1.2 Document Conventions


<Describe any standards or typographical conventions that were followed when writing this SRS,
such as fonts or highlighting that have special significance. For example, state whether priorities
for higher-level requirements are assumed to be inherited by detailed requirements, or whether
every requirement statement is to have its own priority.>

1.3 Intended Audience and Reading Suggestions


<Describe the different types of reader that the document is intended for, such as developers,
project managers, marketing staff, users, testers, and documentation writers. Describe what the
rest of this SRS contains and how it is organized. Suggest a sequence for reading the document,
beginning with the overview sections and proceeding through the sections that are most pertinent
to each reader type.>

1.4 Project Scope


<Provide a short description of the software being specified and its purpose, including relevant
benefits, objectives, and goals. Relate the software to corporate goals or business strategies. >

1.5 References
<List any other documents or Web addresses to which this SRS refers. These may include user
interface style guides, contracts, standards, system requirements specifications, use case
documents, or a vision and scope document. Provide enough information so that the reader could
access a copy of each reference, including title, author, version number, date, and source or
location.>

2. Overall Description

2.1 Product Perspective


<Describe the context and origin of the product being specified in this SRS. For example, state
whether this product is a follow-on member of a product family, a replacement for certain existing
systems, or a new, self-contained product. If the SRS defines a component of a larger system,
relate the requirements of the larger system to the functionality of this software and identify
interfaces between the two. A simple diagram that shows the major components of the overall
system, subsystem interconnections, and external interfaces can be helpful.>

2.2 Product Features


<Summarize the major features the product contains or the significant functions that it performs or
lets the user perform. Details will be provided in Section 3, so only a high level summary is
needed here. Organize the functions to make them understandable to any reader of the SRS. A
picture of the major groups of related requirements and how they relate, such as a top level data
flow diagram or a class diagram, is often effective.>

2.3 User Classes and Characteristics


<Identify the various user classes that you anticipate will use this product. User classes may be
differentiated based on frequency of use, subset of product functions used, technical expertise,
security or privilege levels, educational level, or experience. Describe the pertinent characteristics
of each user class. Certain requirements may pertain only to certain user classes. Distinguish the
favored user classes from those who are less important to satisfy.>

2.4 Operating Environment


<Describe the environment in which the software will operate, including the hardware platform,
operating system and versions, and any other software components or applications with which it
must peacefully coexist.>

3. System Features
<This template illustrates organizing the functional requirements for the product by system
features, the major services provided by the product. You may prefer to organize this section by
use case, mode of operation, user class, object class, functional hierarchy, or combinations of
these, whatever makes the most logical sense for your product.>

3.1 System Feature 1


<Don’t really say “System Feature 1.” State the feature name in just a few words.>
3.1.1 Description and Priority
<Provide a short description of the feature and indicate whether it is of High,
Medium, or Low priority. You could also include specific priority component ratings,
such as benefit, penalty, cost, and risk (each rated on a relative scale from a low of
1 to a high of 9).>
3.1.2 Stimulus/Response Sequences
<List the sequences of user actions and system responses that stimulate the
behavior defined for this feature. These will correspond to the dialog elements
associated with use cases.>
3.1.3 Functional Requirements
<Itemize the detailed functional requirements associated with this feature. These
are the software capabilities that must be present in order for the user to carry out
the services provided by the feature, or to execute the use case. Include how the
product should respond to anticipated error conditions or invalid inputs.
Requirements should be concise, complete, unambiguous, verifiable, and
necessary. Use “TBD” as a placeholder to indicate when necessary information is
not yet available.>

<Each requirement should be uniquely identified with a sequence number or a


meaningful tag of some kind.>

REQ-1:
REQ-2:

3.2 System Feature 2 (and so on)

4. External Interface Requirements

4.1 User Interfaces


<Describe the logical characteristics of each interface between the software product and the
users. This may include sample screen images, any GUI standards or product family style guides
that are to be followed, screen layout constraints, standard buttons and functions (e.g., help) that
will appear on every screen, keyboard shortcuts, error message display standards, and so on.
Define the software components for which a user interface is needed. Details of the user interface
design should be documented in a separate user interface specification.>

4.2 Hardware Interfaces


<Describe the logical and physical characteristics of each interface between the software product
and the hardware components of the system. This may include the supported device types, the
nature of the data and control interactions between the software and the hardware, and
communication protocols to be used.>

4.3 Software Interfaces


<Describe the connections between this product and other specific software components (name
and version), including databases, operating systems, tools, libraries, and integrated commercial
components. Identify the data items or messages coming into the system and going out and
describe the purpose of each. Describe the services needed and the nature of communications.
Refer to documents that describe detailed application programming interface protocols. Identify
data that will be shared across software components. If the data sharing mechanism must be
implemented in a specific way (for example, use of a global data area in a multitasking operating
system), specify this as an implementation constraint.>
5. Other Requirements
<Define any other requirements not covered elsewhere in the SRS. This might include database
requirements, internationalization requirements, legal requirements, reuse objectives for the
project, and so on. Add any new sections that are pertinent to the project.>

Appendix A: Glossary
<Define all the terms necessary to properly interpret the SRS, including acronyms and
abbreviations. You may wish to build a separate glossary that spans multiple projects or the entire
organization, and just include terms specific to a single project in each SRS.>

Appendix B: Analysis Models


<Optionally, include any pertinent analysis models, such as data flow diagrams, class diagrams,
state-transition diagrams, or entity-relationship diagrams.>

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