
Software and Systems Traceability
Springer (Publisher)
Published on 13. April 2014
Book
Paperback/Softback
XVIII, 494 pages
978-1-4471-5819-6 (ISBN)
Description
Software and Systems Traceability
provides a comprehensive description of the practices and theories of software traceability across all phases of the software development lifecycle. The term software traceability is derived from the concept of requirements traceability. Requirements traceability is the ability to track a requirement all the way from its origins to the downstream work products that implement that requirement in a software system. Software traceability is defined as the ability to relate the various types of software artefacts created during the development of software systems. Traceability relations can improve the quality of a product being developed, and reduce the time and cost of development. More specifically, traceability relations can support evolution of software systems, reuse of parts of a system by comparing components of new and existing systems, validation that a system meets its requirements, understanding of the rationale for certain design and implementation decisions, and analysis of the implications of changes in the system.
More details
Edition
2012 ed.
Language
English
Place of publication
London
United Kingdom
Target group
Upper undergraduate
Illustrations
XVIII, 494 p.
Dimensions
Height: 235 mm
Width: 155 mm
Thickness: 28 mm
Weight
768 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-4471-5819-6 (9781447158196)
DOI
10.1007/978-1-4471-2239-5
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

Jane Huang | Orlena Gotel | Andrea Zisman
Software and Systems Traceability
Book
02/2012
Springer
€171.19
Shipment within 15-20 days

Jane Huang | Orlena Gotel | Andrea Zisman
Software and Systems Traceability
E-Book
02/2012
1st Edition
Springer
€171.19
Available for download
Content
Traceability Fundamentals.-Cost-benefits of Traceability.-Acquiring Tool Support for Traceability.-Information Retrieval Methods for Automated Traceability Recovery.-Factors Impacting the Inputs of Traceability Recovery Approaches.-Automated Techniques for Capturing Custom Traceability Links across Heterogeneous Artefacts.-Using Rules for Traceability Creation.-Ready-to-use Traceability on Evolving Projects.-Evolution-driven Trace Acquisition in Eclipse-based Product Line Workspaces.-Traceability in Model-Driven Engineering: Efficient and Scalable Traceability Maintenance.-Traceability in Agile Projects.-Traceability between Runtime and Development time Abstractions.-Tracing Non-functional Requirements.-Medical Device Software Traceability.-The Grand Challenge of Traceability (v1.0).-Appendices.