Software Architecture in DoD Acquisition: An Approach and Language for a Software Development Plan

Abstract

The right software architecture is essential for a software-intensive system. Meeting behavioral requirements and providing quality attributes such as real-time performance, reliability, and maintainability are essential architectural drivers. Because an architecture comprises the earliest, most important, and most far-reaching design decisions, making sure that the architecture will be fit for purpose is one of the most powerful, technical risk mitigation strategies available to a program office. This technical note covers one avenue of exercising architectural control the Software Development Plan (SDP). The report provides an example approach and corresponding SDP language that enable software architecture to play a central role in the technical and organizational management of a software development effort. The example is drawn from an actual SDP written by a major U.S. Department of Defense contractor in a weapon-system procurement. The intent is to provide an example for other acquisition organizations to use (and adapt as appropriate) in their own procurements. While the example is based on a contracting approach with a lead system integrator, it can serve as a model for using an architecture-centric approach effectively to unify and manage software development across multiple suppliers, as found in the conventional prime-with-subcontractors acquisition context.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Feb 01, 2005
Accession Number
ADA443494

Entities

People

  • John K. Bergey
  • Paul C. Clements

Organizations

  • Carnegie Mellon University

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Engineered Resilient Systems

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Acquisition
  • Case Studies
  • Contractors
  • Contracts
  • Department Of Defense
  • Engineering
  • Governments
  • Language
  • Life Cycles
  • Personnel Management
  • Procurement
  • Reliability
  • Software Design
  • Software Development
  • Standards
  • Test And Evaluation
  • Weapon Systems

Fields of Study

  • Computer science
  • Engineering

Readers

  • Defense Acquisition Program Management
  • Software Engineering.