Systems engineering — A guide for the application of ISO/IEC 15288 (System life cycle processes)

ISO/IEC TR 19760:2003 is a Technical Report that provides guidance for application of the International Standard ISO/IEC 15288 Systems Engineering - System life cycle processes in regard to systems and projects irrespective of size and type. ISO/IEC TR 19760:2003 can be used as a companion document to the International Standard by those who: apply the International Standard within their organization; use the International Standard in regard to a specific system; prepare organizational and domain specific standards based on the International Standard. ISO/IEC TR 19760:2003 elaborates on factors that should be considered when applying the International Standard. It does this in the context of the various ways in which ISO/IEC 15288 may be applied. ISO/IEC TR 19760:2003 provides example application concerns lists for user consideration. However, ISO/IEC TR 19760:2003 is not intended to provide how-to guidance for each application area of the International Standard. Guidance is provided for appropriate tailoring of the International Standard for application to specific systems or projects. ISO/IEC TR 19760:2003 also provides appropriate links to other ISO documents for supporting application of the International Standard and to aid in assessing the effectiveness of the application of the International Standard.

Ingénierie systèmes — Un guide pour l'application de l'ISO/CEI 15288 (processus de cycle de vie des systèmes)

General Information

Status
Withdrawn
Publication Date
12-Nov-2003
Withdrawal Date
12-Nov-2003
Current Stage
9599 - Withdrawal of International Standard
Completion Date
26-Aug-2011
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TECHNICAL ISO/IEC
REPORT TR
19760
First edition
2003-11-15


Systems engineering — A guide for the
application of ISO/IEC 15288 (System life
cycle processes)
Ingénierie systèmes — Un guide pour l'application de l'ISO/CEI 15288
(processus de cycle de vie des systèmes)




Reference number
ISO/IEC TR 19760:2003(E)
©
ISO/IEC 2003

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ISO/IEC TR 19760:2003(E)
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©  ISO/IEC 2003
All rights reserved. Unless otherwise specified, no part of this publication may be reproduced or utilized in any form or by any means,
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ISO/IEC TR 19760:2003(E)
Contents Page
Foreword. v
1 Scope. 1
1.1 Purpose. 1
1.2 Audience . 1
1.3 Prerequisites . 1
2 Normative references . 2
3 Context of this Technical Report. 2
3.1 Overview . 2
3.2 Context of the International Standard. 2
3.3 Process categories of the International Standard. 4
4 Use of the International Standard . 5
4.1 Overview . 5
4.2 Concept of use . 5
4.2.1 General. 5
4.2.2 Scope tailoring . 5
4.2.3 Process tailoring . 5
4.3 Planning for use . 6
4.4 Tailoring . 8
4.4.1 General. 8
4.4.2 Tailoring considerations . 8
4.4.3 Tailoring guidance . 9
4.4.4 Tailoring documentation . 10
5 Application concepts. 10
5.1 Overview . 10
5.2 System related concepts. 10
5.2.1 System structure. 10
5.2.2 Kinds of systems . 11
5.2.3 System boundary . 12
5.3 Project related concepts . 12
5.3.1 Project focus . 12
5.3.2 Hierarchy of projects . 15
5.3.3 Project organizational structure. 15
5.4 System life cycle concept . 16
5.5 Process application concepts . 17
5.5.1 Process use . 17
5.5.2 Life cycle processes . 18
5.5.3 Recursive/iterative application of processes. 20
5.5.4 Methods and tools . 21
6 Application of the International Standard life cycle processes . 22
6.1 Overview . 22
6.2 Application of the technical processes to engineer a system . 22
6.2.1 General. 22
6.2.2 Related technical processes for system definition . 23
6.2.3 System structure definition. 26
6.2.4 Related technical processes for system realization . 27
6.2.5 Enabling system definition and realization.29
6.3 Application of life cycle processes to form an agreement. 30
6.4 Application of life cycle processes to satisfy an agreement. 32
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ISO/IEC TR 19760:2003(E)
7 Application of International Standard processes using the system life cycle .33
7.1 Overview.33
7.2 Enterprise view.34
7.2.1 Approaches.34
7.2.2 Sequential approach .36
7.2.3 Incremental approach .37
7.2.4 Evolutionary approach .38
7.3 Engineering view.39
7.3.1 General .39
7.3.2 Technical reviews.41
7.3.3 Configuration audits .42
8 Application by organizations .42
8.1 Overview.42
8.2 Uses of the International Standard within an organization .43
Annex A (informative) Relationship between ISO/IEC 15288 and other more detailed standards.45
Annex B (informative) References for design related special factors.47
Annex C (informative) Notes for application of ISO/IEC 15288 processes .51

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ISO/IEC TR 19760:2003(E)
Foreword
ISO (the International Organization for Standardization) and IEC (the International Electrotechnical
Commission) form the specialized system for worldwide standardization. National bodies that are members of
ISO or IEC participate in the development of International Standards through technical committees
established by the respective organization to deal with particular fields of technical activity. ISO and IEC
technical committees collaborate in fields of mutual interest. Other international organizations, governmental
and non-governmental, in liaison with ISO and IEC, also take part in the work. In the field of information
technology, ISO and IEC have established a joint technical committee, ISO/IEC JTC 1.
International Standards are drafted in accordance with the rules given in the ISO/IEC Directives, Part 2.
The main task of the joint technical committee is to prepare International Standards. Draft International
Standards adopted by the joint technical committee are circulated to national bodies for voting. Publication as
an International Standard requires approval by at least 75 % of the national bodies casting a vote.
In exceptional circumstances, the joint technical committee may propose the publication of a Technical Report
of one of the following types:
 type 1, when the required support cannot be obtained for the publication of an International Standard,
despite repeated efforts;
 type 2, when the subject is still under technical development or where for any other reason there is the
future but not immediate possibility of an agreement on an International Standard;
 type 3, when the joint technical committee has collected data of a different kind from that which is
normally published as an International Standard (“state of the art”, for example).
Technical Reports of types 1 and 2 are subject to review within three years of publication, to decide whether
they can be transformed into International Standards. Technical Reports of type 3 do not necessarily have to
be reviewed until the data they provide are considered to be no longer valid or useful.
Attention is drawn to the possibility that some of the elements of this document may be the subject of patent
rights. ISO and IEC shall not be held responsible for identifying any or all such patent rights.
ISO/IEC TR 19760, which is a Technical Report of type 3, was prepared by Joint Technical Committee
ISO/IEC JTC 1, Information technology, Subcommittee SC 7, Software and system engineering.
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TECHNICAL REPORT ISO/IEC TR 19760:2003(E)

Systems engineering — A guide for the application of
ISO/IEC 15288 (System life cycle processes)
1 Scope
1.1 Purpose
This Technical Report provides guidance for the application of ISO/IEC 15288 Systems engineering —
System life cycle processes (referred to as the International Standard) to systems and projects of various size
and type. This Technical Report can be used as a companion document to the International Standard.
This Technical Report elaborates on factors that should be considered when applying the International
Standard. It does this in the context of the various illustrative ways in which the International Standard may be
applied. Also, lists within this Technical Report are not meant to be exhaustive but to provide the user with
examples to consider.
The guidance contained in this Technical Report may be tailored as appropriate to the system and project
using guidance in Annex A of the International Standard and 4.4 of this Technical Report.
This Technical Report is intended to provide appropriate links to other ISO documents for supporting
application of the International Standard and to aid in assessing the effectiveness of the application of the
International Standard.
Not all areas of the International Standard are meant to have equal treatment in this Technical Report. More
specific information is provided where providing such information will help in the application of the
International Standard. This Technical Report is not meant to provide how-to guidance for each area of the
International Standard.
1.2 Audience
This Technical Report is applicable to audiences such as identified below:
a) those who apply the International Standard;
b) those who use the International Standard for a specific system;
c) those who prepare organizational and specific domain standards based on the International Standard.
1.3 Prerequisites
The list below provides prerequisites for users of this Technical Report:
a) availability of ISO/IEC 15288;
b) familiarity with ISO/IEC 15288;
c) familiarity with relevant organizational and project policies;
d) general knowledge of project management, systems engineering and system life cycle models.
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ISO/IEC TR 19760:2003(E)
2 Normative references
The following referenced documents are indispensable for the application of this document. For dated
references, only the edition cited applies. For undated references, the latest edition of the referenced
document (including any amendments) applies.
ISO/IEC 15288, Systems engineering — System life cycle processes
ISO/IEC 12207, Information technology — Software life cycle processes
ISO/IEC TR 15271, Information technology — Guide for ISO/IEC 12207 (Software life cycle processes)
ISO/IEC 15504 (all parts), Information technology — Software process assessment
ISO 9001:2000, Quality management systems — Requirements
3 Context of this Technical Report
3.1 Overview
This clause has two objectives. The first objective is to provide an overview of the dynamic utilization of the
International Standard with respect to key concepts and processes. Illustrated in this clause are the
relationships between types of systems, system life cycles and the application of agreement, enterprise,
project and technical processes. The second objective is to give pointers to the various clauses of this
Technical Report that provide guidance to a user for applying the International Standard concepts and
processes.
3.2 Context of the International Standard
Organizations need to be able to conduct commerce in systems (including their associated products and
services). The International Standard facilitates commerce by providing the common framework for
establishing and executing agreements between system acquirers and suppliers with respect to developing,
using, and managing a system within the defined life cycle of that system. The International Standard is
applicable to organizations, enterprises and projects whether they act as the acquirer or the supplier of a
system.
The context of the International Standard is illustrated in Figure 1.
A single project may involve multiple organizations working together as partners. Such a project should use
the International Standard to establish common terminology, information flows and interfaces among the
several organizations to enhance communications.
When an organization applies the International Standard to a particular system, that system becomes the
system-of-interest. The system-of-interest has a life cycle that consists of multiple stages through which the
system passes during its lifetime, denoted s1, s2, … sn. Typical stages, as described in Annex B of the
International Standard, are concept, development, production, utilization, support and retirement. The
management of the progression from one stage to another and the engineering activities associated with
providing appropriate work products and decision-making information is described in Clause 6 of this
Technical Report.
A number of enabling systems are deployed throughout the system life cycle to provide the system-of-interest
with support as needed. Each life cycle stage prior to system use (concept stage, development stage, and
production stage) can require an enabling system. Enabling systems that cooperate with the system-of-
interest during its utilization, support and retirement stages can be needed, as well. It is important to note that
an enabling system has its own life cycle and that when the International Standard is applied to it, it then
becomes a system-of-interest. The role and use of enabling systems are described in 5.2.3, 5.3.1.4, and 6.2.5
of this Technical Report.
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ISO/IEC TR 19760:2003(E)
The International Standard is applicable at any level of the structure associated with a system-of-interest. As a
system is decomposed recursively into its system elements, the processes of the International Standard may
be used for each system and system element in the system structure. Each system and system element has a
life cycle of its own and its own set of enabling systems. This system structure is described in 5.2.1 of this
Technical Report.
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11 22 nn
Figure 1 — Context of the International Standard
In order to perform needed operations and transformations upon systems during their life cycles, the
organization creates and monitors projects. Projects have defined scope, resources (including time) and focus.
The scope can involve managing all of the stages of the life cycle, a subset of the stages, one or more defined
processes or one or more process activities. The time scale can be of varying duration, for example one hour
or tens of years. The focus of the project is related to the system-of-interest and its systems and system
elements in some form of system structure or stage partitioning. Related project concepts are described in 5.3
of this Technical Report and system life cycle concepts are described in 5.4.
Organizations focus on systems that are created by projects within the organization or in conjunction with
other organizations. Projects have a span of interest that includes the system-of-interest and its related
enabling systems. Some enabling systems are under direct control of the project. The system-of-interest and
those enabling systems make up the project span of control. The span of interest is described in 5.3.1.4.
The work performed by projects is on or with the system-of-interest within one or more system life cycle
stages. The scope of the International Standard includes the definition of an appropriate life cycle for a system,
the selection of processes to be applied throughout the life cycle and the application of these processes to
fulfil agreements and achieve customer satisfaction.
The International Standard can be applied to all types of systems and system elements consisting of one or
more of the following: hardware, software, humans, processes, procedures, facilities, and naturally occurring
entities. The use of the International Standard for systems within this broad scope is one of its main
advantages.
The use of the International Standard may be adapted to accommodate the varying project requirements in
treating system life cycles. This may be performed by adjusting the scope as described in 4.2 and tailoring
described in 4.4 of this Technical Report and Annex A of the International Standard.
© ISO/IEC 2003 — All rights reserved 3

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ISO/IEC TR 19760:2003(E)
3.3 Process categories of the International Standard
The four process groups of the International Standard as well as the primary relationships between the groups
are portrayed in Figure 2. The role of the Enterprise and Project group processes is to achieve the project
goals within applicable life cycle stages to satisfy an agreement. Enterprise processes provide enabling
resources and infrastructure that are used to create, support, and monitor projects and to assess project
effectiveness. The project processes ensure that adequate planning, assessment, and control activities are
performed to manage processes and life cycle stages.
Appropriate processes are selected from the Technical Processes and used to populate projects in order for
the project to perform life cycle related work.
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Figure 2 — Role of International Standard processes
Projects may need to establish relationships with other projects within the organization, as well as those in
other organizations. Such relationships are established through the agreement processes of acquisition and
supply as shown in Figure 3. The degree of formality of the agreement is adapted to the internal or external
business relationships between projects. An example and discussion of the use of the agreement processes is
provided in 5.3.1.3 of this Technical Report.
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Figure 3 — Use of agreement processes
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ISO/IEC TR 19760:2003(E)
4 Use of the International Standard
4.1 Overview
The International Standard can be used for one or more of the following reasons.
a) A specific project can use the International Standard for engineering, utilizing, supporting or retiring a
system-of-interest.
b) An organization can use the International Standard for supporting and controlling the operation of one or
more of the system life cycle stages.
c) A domain organization or other organization can use the International Standard for developing domain-
specific or organization-specific standards. These can address the engineering of systems, the
management of engineering activities or the operation of one of the system life cycle stages.
d) Multiple organizations can use the International Standard as a basis for joint projects.
4.2 Concept of use
4.2.1 General
Each organization is driven by the nature of its business, its social responsibilities, and its business strategy.
These provide constraints on available business opportunities that the organization and its enterprises can
exploit. To help exploit opportunities the enterprise establishes policies and procedures to guide the
performance of projects. To help establish these policies and procedures, and to determine the resources
needed by the enterprise, the International Standard can be used to provide specific standardized processes
for use within one or more life cycle models.
A suggested use concept is illustrated in Figure 4. This figure provided the basis for tailoring the scope of the
International Standard for one of the specific uses of 4.1.
4.2.2 Scope tailoring
For example, if an enterprise that does development only and is not involved in the utilization, support, or
retirement life cycle stages, that enterprise could tailor the scope of the International Standard accordingly.
The policies and procedures called for in the non-applicable parts of the International Standard would not be
included in the organization's policies and procedures. Additionally, inputs such as those listed below can help
shape the policies and procedures of an enterprise:
a) life cycle model and related entry or exit criteria used by the enterprise for decision making as well as for
establishing milestone reviews of a project;
b) resource availability and the resources the enterprise is willing to commit;
c) expertise and skills available to the enterprise to provide enterprise products and services;
d) technology available for enterprise products and services.
4.2.3 Process tailoring
When a project is established to satisfy a set of stakeholder requirements or acquirer specifications,
processes included in the enterprise policies and procedures or in the International Standard itself can be
tailored according to the scope, size and funding of the work to be done. Planning the work of the project can
be dependent on factors such as the following:
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ISO/IEC TR 1976
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