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Verification and validation guidelines for high integrity systems. Volume 1
Author(s) -
H. Hecht,
Myron Hecht,
G. Dinsmore,
S. Hecht,
Dong Tang
Publication year - 1995
Publication title -
osti oai (u.s. department of energy office of scientific and technical information)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.2172/34470
Subject(s) - dependability , verification and validation , computer science , reliability engineering , reliability (semiconductor) , volume (thermodynamics) , process (computing) , field (mathematics) , software verification , software , systems engineering , software engineering , software system , engineering , power (physics) , software construction , operations management , physics , mathematics , quantum mechanics , pure mathematics , programming language , operating system
High integrity systems include all protective (safety and mitigation) systems for nuclear power plants, and also systems for which comparable reliability requirements exist in other fields, such as in the process industries, in air traffic control, and in patient monitoring and other medical systems. Verification aims at determining that each stage in the software development completely and correctly implements requirements that were established in a preceding phase, while validation determines that the overall performance of a computer system completely and correctly meets system requirements. Volume I of the report reviews existing classifications for high integrity systems and for the types of errors that may be encountered, and makes recommendations for verification and validation procedures, based on assumptions about the environment in which these procedures will be conducted. The final chapter of Volume I deals with a framework for standards in this field. Volume II contains appendices dealing with specific methodologies for system classification, for dependability evaluation, and for two software tools that can automate otherwise very labor intensive verification and validation activities

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