ISO/IEC 15288

The ISO/IEC 15288 is a systems engineering standard covering processes and lifecycle stages. Initial planning for the ISO/IEC 15288:2002(E) standard started in 1994 when the need for a common systems engineering process framework was recognized. The previously accepted standard MIL STD 499A (1974) was cancelled after a memo from SECDEF prohibited the use of most United States Military Standards without a waiver. The first edition was issued on 1 November 2002. Stuart Arnold was the editor and Harold Lawson was the architect of the standard.[1] In 2004 this standard was adopted as IEEE 15288. ISO/IEC 15288 has been updated 1 February 2008 as well as on 15 May 2015.[2]

ISO/IEC 15288 is managed by ISO/IEC JTC1/SC7, which is the ISO committee responsible for developing ISO standards in the area of Software and Systems Engineering. ISO/IEC 15288 is part of the SC 7 Integrated set of Standards, and other standards in this domain include:

  • ISO/IEC TR 15504 which addresses capability
  • ISO/IEC 12207 and ISO/IEC 15288 which address lifecycle and
  • ISO 9001 & ISO 90003 which address quality

History

  • ISO/IEC 15288:2015
  • Revises: ISO/IEC 15288:2008 (harmonized with ISO/IEC 12207:2008)
  • Revises: ISO/IEC 15288:2002 (first edition)

Processes

The standard defines processes divided into four categories:

  • Technical
  • Project
  • Agreement, and
  • Enterprise

Each process is defined by a purpose, outcomes, and activities. ISO 15288 comprises 25 processes which have 123 outcomes derived from 403 activities.[3]

  1. Clause 6.4.1 - Business or Mission Analysis Process
  2. Clause 6.4.2 - Stakeholder Needs and Requirements Definition Process
  3. Clause 6.4.3 - System Requirements Definition Process
  4. Clause 6.4.4 - Architectural Definition Process
  5. Clause 6.4.5 - Design Definition Process
  6. Clause 6.4.6 - System Analysis Process
  7. Clause 6.4.7 - Implementation Process
  8. Clause 6.4.8 - Integration Process
  9. Clause 6.4.9 - Verification Process
  10. Clause 6.4.10 - Transition Process
  11. Clause 6.4.11 - Validation Process
  12. Clause 6.4.12 - Operation Process
  13. Clause 6.4.13 - Maintenance Process
  14. Clause 6.4.14 - Disposal Process

Example life cycle stages described in the document are: concept, development, production, utilisation, support, and retirement. However, these stages are not normative; the standard defines processes, not stages.

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gollark: OOP isn't *that* apioformic.
gollark: That is why they are "public".

See also

References

  • 15288-2008 - ISO/IEC/IEEE Systems and Software Engineering — System Life Cycle Processes. 2008. doi:10.1109/IEEESTD.2008.4475828. ISBN 978-0-7381-5665-1.
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