A description of how Praxis High Integrity Systems uses System Analysis to define systems and sub-systems unambiguously and verifiably, and a discussion of the benefits of this approach:End:
 

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System Analysis

Verifiable and Unambiguous System and Sub-system definition

Our approach to system analysis allows us to define systems and sub-systems unambiguously and verifiably without any implementation bias.

We start from a key principle of treating the system as a single 'black box' and use techniques from UML to develop a system functional specification. This is followed by architectural design and subsystem specification. We again use UML techniques to support our approach. We use only a subset of the selected notations in order to keep the level of abstraction appropriate to the early stages of the lifecycle.

The major applications of our methods have been to systems for the rail industry, where a rigorous approach is demanded by the safety-related nature of the applications. The systems presented different problems, and had substantially different architectures, but the same methods were effective in each case.

We have found that using modelling techniques to express a system design provides a systematic and rigorous approach often lacking in high-level design documents.




Benefits of using Praxis System Analysis and Design: a structured framework adaptable to a project's needs.

Benefit Achieved through
Reduced System Integration time and costs Requirements led, top-down design methodology
Reduced Sub-system development time and costs Use of abstraction and object orientated modelling techniques to manage complexity and sub-system variants
Reduced risk Iterative assessment against defined set of design targets
Separation of concerns Distinct architectural views chosen to support the specific design considerations of the system (e.g. human factors)
Cost effective system integrity and quality Appropriate use of formality and structured recording of design decisions

 

 

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