DocumentCode
3333003
Title
Safety Concept Trees
Author
Domis, Dominik ; Förster, Marc ; Kemmann, Sören ; Trapp, Mario
Author_Institution
Dept. Component Eng., Fraunhofer IESE, Kaiserslautern
fYear
2009
fDate
26-29 Jan. 2009
Firstpage
212
Lastpage
217
Abstract
The development of safety-critical systems requires the dasiasafepsila development of a dasiasafepsila system. Not only should the realized system fulfill specific safety goals, but for certification purposes the development process itself has to comply with safety standards. Both of these tasks are complex and cause a lot of effort and costs that cannot be sufficiently reduced by existing safety engineering methods. To facilitate these tasks, we developed the SICMA method. SICMA guides the engineer in following safety standards in the development of a system, in developing a system design that fulfills its safety goals and in documenting that the developed system is sufficiently safe. SICMA introduces Safety Concept Trees (SCTs) as a backbone to achieve vertical and horizontal traceability between all safety information, as needed for certification purposes. SCTs represent and fully preserve the component-oriented perspective assumed by state-of-the-art development methods, facilitating the handling and maintenance of complex systems. Using SCTs, a system design and its artifacts can be rigorously analyzed on every refinement level and it can be shown that they adhere to safety and certification criteria. This will lead to significantly reduced effort and costs in the standard-compliant development of safety-critical systems.
Keywords
safety-critical software; systems analysis; SICMA method; certification; development process; horizontal traceability; safe development; safe system; safety concept trees; safety engineering; safety goals; safety standards; safety-critical systems; system design; vertical traceability; Certification; Costs; Design engineering; Fault trees; Hazards; IEC standards; ISO standards; Software engineering; Software safety; Standards development; fault trees; safety case; safety concept;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Reliability and Maintainability Symposium, 2009. RAMS 2009. Annual
Conference_Location
Fort Worth, TX
ISSN
0149-144X
Print_ISBN
978-1-4244-2508-2
Electronic_ISBN
0149-144X
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/RAMS.2009.4914677
Filename
4914677
Link To Document