System Verification

From SEBoK
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Verification is a set of actions used to check the correctness of any element such as a system element, a system, a document, a service, a task, a requirement, etc. These actions are planned and carried out throughout the life cycle of the system. Verification is a generic term that needs to be instantiated within the context it occurs.

Verification understood as a process is a transverse activity to every life cycle stage of the system. In particular during the development cycle of the system, the Verification Process is performed in parallel of the System Definition and System Realization processes, and applies onto any activity and product resulting from the activity. The activities of every life cycle process and those of the Verification Process fit into each others. The Integration Process uses intensively the Verification Process.

Definition and Purpose

Definition of Verification: Confirmation, through the provision of objective evidence, that specified requirements have been fulfilled.

With a note added in ISO-IEC 15288: Verification is a set of activities that compares a system or system element against the required characteristics. This may include, but is not limited to, specified requirements, design description and the system itself.

The purpose of Verification, as a generic action, is to identify the faults/defects introduced at the time of any transformation of inputs into outputs. Verification is used to prove that the transformation was made according to the selected and appropriate methods, techniques, standards or rules.

Verification is based on tangible evidences; this means based on information whose veracity can be demonstrated, based on factual results obtained by techniques such as inspection, measurement, test, analysis, calculation, etc. So, verify a system (Product, Service, or Enterprise) consists in comparing the realized characteristics or properties of the Product, Service or Enterprise against its expected Design Properties.

Principles and concepts

Concept of Verification Action

Why to verify? – In the context of human realizations, any conscious people know that "error" is part of the thought and the human activity. It is the case with any engineering activity. Studies in human reliability have shown that people trained to a specific operation makes around 10-3 errors per hour in the best case. In any activity or outcome of activity, the search of potential errors should not either be neglected by considering that they will not happen or that they should not happen; the consequence of errors can cause extremely significant failures or threats.

Verification Action – A Verification Action is defined then performed.

Figure 1. Definition and usage of a Verification Action (Faisandier 2011) Reprinted with permission of © Alain Faisandier


FIGURE TO BE REPLACED - TITLE HAS BEEN UPDATED

Definition of a Verification Action applied to an engineering element includes:

  • Identification of the element on which the Verification Action will be performed,
  • Identification of the reference to define the expected result of the Verification Action.


Performance of the Verification Action includes:

  • obtaining a result from performance of the Verification Action onto the submitted element,
  • comparing obtained result with expected result,
  • deducing a degree of correctness of the element.

What to verify? – Any engineering element can be verified using a specific reference for comparison: Stakeholder Requirement, System Requirement, Function, System Element, Document, etc. Examples are provided in table x.

Table 1. Examples of Verified Items (Table Developed for BKCASE)
SEBoKv05 KA-SystRealiz V&V Examples.png

TABLE TO BE REPLACED - TITLE HAS BEEN UPDATED

Verification versus Validation

The term Verification is often associated with the term Validation and understood as a single concept of V & V. Validation is used to ensure that “one is working the right problem” whereas Verification is used to ensure that “one has solved the problem right”. (Martin 1997)

Source of the terms – From an actual and etymological meaning, the term verification comes from the Latin "verus" – that means truth – and "facere" – that means make/perform. So verification means to prove that something is “true” or correct (a property, a characteristic, etc.). The term validation comes from the Latin "valere" – that means become strong – and has the same root as value. So validation means to prove that something has the right features to produce the expected effects. Verification and Validation in plain English – (Jerome, Lake, INCOSE 1999)

Process similarities and differences - The main differences between the Verification Process and the Validation Process concern the reference used to check correctness of an element, and acceptability of the effective correctness.

  • Within verification, comparison between expected result and obtained result is generally binary whereas within validation the result of the comparison may require a judgment of value to accept or not the obtained result compared to a threshold, a limit.
  • Verification relates mainly to one element, whereas validation relates to a set of elements and considers this set as a whole;
  • Validation presupposes that Verification Actions have been performed first.
  • The techniques used to define and perform the Verification Actions and those for Validation Actions are very similar.

Integration, Verification, Validation of the system

There is sometimes a misconception that Verification occurs after Integration and before Validation. In most of the cases, it is more appropriate to begin verification activities during development and to continue them into deployment and use.

Once System Elements have been realized, their integration to form the complete system is performed. Integration consists to assemble and to perform Verification Action as stated in the Integration Process. A Final Validation activity generally occurs when the system is integrated, but a certain number of Validation Actions are also performed in parallel of the System Integration in order to reduce as much as possible the number of Verification Actions and Validation Actions while controlling the risks that could be generated if some checks are dropped out. Integration, Verification and Validation are intimately processed together due to the necessity of optimizing the strategy of Verification and Validation and the strategy of Integration.

Process Approach

Purpose and Principle of the Approach

The purpose of the Verification Process is to confirm that the specified design requirements are fulfilled by the system. This process provides the information required to effect the remedial actions that correct non-conformances in the realized system or the processes that act on it. (ISO-IEC 15288:2008)

Each system element and the complete system should be compared against its own design references (specified requirements). As stated by Dennis Buede, “verification is the matching of [configuration items], components, sub-systems, and the system to corresponding requirements to ensure that each has been built right.” (Buede 2009) This means that the Verification Process is instantiated as many times as necessary during the global development of the system.

Because of the generic nature of a process, the Verification Process can be applied to any engineering element that has conducted to the definition and realization of the system elements and the system itself.

Facing the huge number of potential Verification Actions that may be generated by the normal approach, it is necessary to optimize the verification strategy. This strategy is based on the balance between what should be verified as a must, and constraints such as time, cost, and feasibility of testing that limit naturally the number of Verification Actions, and the risks one accepts dropping out some Verification Actions.

Several approaches exist that may be used for defining the Verification Process. INCOSE defines two main steps: plan and perform the Verification Actions. (INCOSE 2010) NASA has a slightly more detailed approach that includes five main steps: prepare verification, perform verification, analyze outcomes, produce report, and capture work products. (NASA December 2007, 1-360, p. 102)

Any approach may be used, provided that it is appropriate to the scope of the system, the constraints of the project, includes the activities listed above in some way, and is appropriately coordinated with other activities.

Generic inputs are baseline references of the submitted element. If the element is a system, inputs are the logical and physical architectures elements as described in a System Design Document, the design description of internal interfaces to the system and Interfaces Requirements external to the system, and by extension the System Requirements.

Generic outputs are the Verification Plan that includes verification strategy, selected Verification Actions, Verification Procedures, Verification Tools, verified element or system, Verification Reports, issue/trouble reports and change requests on design.

Activities of the Process

  • Establish the verification strategy drafted in a Verification Plan (this activity is carried out concurrently to System Definition activities):
  1. Identify verification scope in listing as exhaustive as possible characteristics or properties that should be checked; number of Verification Actions can be high.
  2. Identify constraints according to their origin (technical feasibility, management constraints as cost, time, availability of verification means or qualified personnel, contractual constraints as criticality of the mission) that limit potentially Verification Actions.
  3. Define appropriate verification techniques to be applied such as inspection, analysis, simulation, peer-review, testing, etc., depending of the best step of the project to perform every Verification Action according to constraints.
  4. Trade off of what should be verified (scope) taking into account all constraints or limits and deduce what can be verified; the selection of Verification Actions would be made according to the type of system, objectives of the project, acceptable risks and constraints.
  5. Optimize the verification strategy defining most appropriate verification technique for every Verification Action, defining necessary verification means (tools, test-benches, personnel, location, facilities) according to selected verification technique, scheduling Verification Actions execution in the project steps or milestones, defining configuration of elements submitted to Verification Actions (mainly about testing on physical elements).
  • Perform Verification Actions includes following tasks:
  1. Detail each Verification Action, in particular expected results, verification technique to be applied and corresponding means (equipments, resources and qualified personnel).
  2. Acquire verification means used during system definition steps (qualified personnel, modeling tools, mocks-up, simulators, facilities); then those during the integration step (qualified personnel, Verification Tools, measuring equipments, facilities, Verification Procedures, etc.).
  3. Carry out Verification Procedures at the right time, in the expected environment, with expected means, tools and techniques.
  4. Capture and record results obtained when performing Verification Actions using Verification Procedures and means.
  • Analyze obtained results and compare them to expected results; record status compliant or not; generate Verification Reports and potential issue/trouble reports and change requests on design as necessary.
  • Control the process includes following tasks:
  1. Update the Verification Plan according to the progress of the project; in particular planned Verification Actions can be redefined because of unexpected events.
  2. Coordinate verification activities with project manager for schedule, acquisition of means, personnel and resources, with designers for issue/trouble/non conformance reports, with configuration manager for versions of physical elements, design baselines, etc.

Artifacts and Ontology Elements

This process may create several artifacts such as:

  • Verification Plan (contains the verification strategy)
  • Verification Matrix (contains for each Verification Action, submitted element, applied technique, step of execution, system block concerned, expected result, obtained result, etc.)
  • Verification Procedures (describe Verification Actions to be performed, Verification Tools needed, Verification Configuration, resources, personnel, schedule, etc.)
  • Verification Reports
  • Verification Tools
  • Verified element
  • Issue / Non-Conformance / Trouble Reports
  • Change Requests on design

This process handles the ontology elements of the Table 1.

Placeholder for Table 1 - to be created

Methods and Techniques

There are several verification techniques to check that an element or a system conforms to its Design References, or its specified requirements. These techniques are the same as those used for validation, though the application of the techniques may differ slightly. In particular the purposes are different; verification is used to detect faults/defects, whereas validation is to prove satisfaction of (system and/or stakeholder) requirements. Table 4 below provides synthetic descriptions of some techniques for verification.

Placeholder for Table 2 - to be created

Practical Considerations

Major pitfalls encountered with System Verification are presented in Table 4.

Table 4. Major pitfalls with System Verification and Validation (Table Developed for BKCASE)
SEBoKv05 KA-SystRealiz pitfalls with V&V.png

Major proven practices encountered with system verification and validation are presented in Table 5.

Table 5. Proven Practices with System Verification and Validation (Table Developed for BKCASE)
SEBoKv05 KA-SystRealiz practices with V&V.png

References

Citations

Buede, D.M. 2009. The Engineering Design of Systems: Models and Methods. 2nd ed. Hoboken, NJ, USA: John Wiley & Sons Inc.

INCOSE. 2011. INCOSE Systems Engineering Handbook. Version 3.2. San Diego, CA, USA: International Council on Systems Engineering (INCOSE), INCOSE-TP-2003-002-03.2.1.

ISO/IEC 2008. Systems and Software Engineering -- System Life Cycle Processes. Geneva, Switzerland: International Organisation for Standardisation / International Electrotechnical Commissions. ISO/IEC/IEEE 15288:2008 (E).

NASA. 2007. Systems Engineering Handbook. Washington, DC, USA: National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), December 2007. NASA/SP-2007-6105.

Primary References

INCOSE. 2011. INCOSE Systems Engineering Handbook: A Guide for System Life Cycle Processes and Activities, version 3.2.1. San Diego, CA, USA: International Council on Systems Engineering (INCOSE), INCOSE-TP-2003-002-03.2.1.

ISO/IEC/IEEE. 2008. Systems and Software Engineering - System Life Cycle Processes. Geneva, Switzerland: International Organization for Standardization (ISO)/International Electronical Commission (IEC), Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers. ISO/IEC/IEEE 15288:2008 (E).

NASA. 2007. Systems Engineering Handbook. Washington, D.C.: National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), December 2007. NASA/SP-2007-6105.

Additional References

Buede, D.M. 2009. The Engineering Design of Systems: Models and Methods. 2nd ed. Hoboken, NJ, USA: John Wiley & Sons Inc.

DAU. 2010. Defense Acquisition Guidebook (DAG). Ft. Belvoir, VA, USA: Defense Acquisition University (DAU)/U.S. Department of Defense (DoD). February 19, 2010.

ECSS. 2009. Systems Engineering General Requirements. Noordwijk, Netherlands: Requirements and Standards Division, European Cooperation for Space Standardization (ECSS), 6 March 2009. ECSS-E-ST-10C.

SAE International. 1996. Certification Considerations for Highly-Integrated or Complex Aircraft Systems. Warrendale, PA, USA: SAE International, ARP475.

SEI. 2007. "Measurement and Analysis Process Area" in Capability Maturity Model Integrated (CMMI) for Development, version 1.2. Pittsburg, PA, USA: Software Engineering Institute (SEI)/Carnegie Mellon University (CMU).


<- Previous Article | Parent Article | Next Article ->

Comments from 0.5 wiki

<html> <iframe src="http://bkcasewiki.org/index.php?title=Talk:System_Verification_and_Validation&printable=yes" width=825 height=200 frameborder=1 scrolling=auto> </iframe> </html>


SEBoK v. 1.9.1 released 30 September 2018

SEBoK Discussion

Please provide your comments and feedback on the SEBoK below. You will need to log in to DISQUS using an existing account (e.g. Yahoo, Google, Facebook, Twitter, etc.) or create a DISQUS account. Simply type your comment in the text field below and DISQUS will guide you through the login or registration steps. Feedback will be archived and used for future updates to the SEBoK. If you provided a comment that is no longer listed, that comment has been adjudicated. You can view adjudication for comments submitted prior to SEBoK v. 1.0 at SEBoK Review and Adjudication. Later comments are addressed and changes are summarized in the Letter from the Editor and Acknowledgements and Release History.

If you would like to provide edits on this article, recommend new content, or make comments on the SEBoK as a whole, please see the SEBoK Sandbox.

blog comments powered by Disqus