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Description / Abstract:
This guide describes the scope of application and
interrelationships for the members of the IEEE 1175 family of
standards, and it points the reader to the appropriate standards
for clarifying issues involved in effectively integrating computing
system tools into a productive engineering environment. The other
members of this family are:
- IEEE P1175.2™, Draft Recommended Practice for CASE
Tool Interconnections-Characterization of Interconnections
- IEEE P1175.3™, Draft Standard for CASE Tool
Interconnections-Reference Model for Specifying Software
Behavior
- IEEE P1175.4™ , Draft Standard for CASE Tool
Interconnections-Reference Model for Specifying System Behavior
- IEEE P1175.5™ , Draft Standard for CASE Tool
Interconnections-Syntax for Transferring Behavior
Specifications
Purpose
To assist the users in the effective application of the IEEE
1175 family of standards, this guide provides an overview of the
remaining members of this family. It describes the organization of
this family, the focus of the individual members, and the logical
interrelationships among the members. By addressing the fundamental
concepts of computing system tool interconnections, this guide also
establishes a framework for applying the recommended practice and
the standards in this family.
The discussion of interconnections in this family actually has
wider applicability to computing system tools in general, beyond
only CASE tools. Most computing system tools have interconnections
with organizations, users, platforms, and other tools, so
consideration of these interconnections is important to them. Also,
while most computing system tools do not need to communicate
behavior descriptions of subject systems, their creators need to
develop such descriptions for them.
In these standards, the word interconnection has an abstract
connotation: it includes all ways in which successful operation of
a computing system tool depends on its environment. Thus, an
interconnection is an association between a computing system tool
and something in the environment. This family of standards
recognizes two forms of interconnections. A passive interconnection
is an interoperability agreement. An active interconnection is an
interaction mechanism. These standards address the characteristics
of interconnections between computing system tools and their
organizational context, their user context, their platform context,
and the context provided by other tools. Interconnections between
computing system tools are the principal focus of these
standards.