Book Image

Agile Model-Based Systems Engineering Cookbook Second Edition - Second Edition

By : Dr. Bruce Powel Douglass
Book Image

Agile Model-Based Systems Engineering Cookbook Second Edition - Second Edition

By: Dr. Bruce Powel Douglass

Overview of this book

Agile MBSE can help organizations manage change while ensuring system correctness and meeting customers’ needs. But deployment challenges have changed since our first edition. The Agile Model-Based Systems Engineering Cookbook’s second edition focuses on workflows – or recipes – that will help MBSE practitioners and team leaders address practical situations that are part of deploying MBSE as part of an agile development process across the enterprise. In this 2nd edition, the Cameo MagicDraw Systems Modeler tool – the most popular tool for MBSE – is used in examples (models are downloadable by readers). Written by a world-renowned expert in MBSE, this book will take you through systems engineering workflows in the Cameo Systems Modeler SysML modeling tool and show you how they can be used with an agile and model-based approach. You’ll start with the key concepts of agile methods for systems engineering. Next, each recipe will take you through initiating a project, outlining stakeholder needs, defining and analyzing system requirements, specifying system architecture, performing model-based engineering trade studies, all the way to handling systems specifications off to downstream engineering. By the end of this MBSE book, you’ll learn how to implement systems engineering workflows and create systems engineering models.
Table of Contents (9 chapters)
6
Other Books You May Enjoy
7
Index
Appendix A: The Pegasus Bike Trainer

Recipes in this chapter

  • Functional Analysis with Scenarios
  • Functional Analysis with Activities
  • Functional Analysis with State Machines
  • Functional Analysis with User Stories
  • Model-Based Safety Analysis
  • Model-Based Threat Analysis
  • Specifying Logical System Interfaces
  • Creating the Logical Data Schema

This chapter contains recipes to do with the capturing and analysis of requirements. The first four recipes are alternative ways to achieve essentially the same thing. Functional analysis generates high-quality requirements, use cases, and user stories – all means to understand what the system must be.

By “high-quality requirements,” I mean requirements focused on a use case that are demonstrably:

  • Complete
  • Accurate
  • Correct
  • Consistent
  • Verifiable

The problem is that natural language is ambiguous, imprecise, and only weakly verifiable. Keeping the human-readable text...