Source: Nokia Research Center (2001)
Publication Type: Article
Abstract: Contemporary software engineering utilizes product lines for
reducing time to market and development cost of a single product
variant, for improving quality of the products, and for creating better
estimations of the development process. Most product line development
processes rely on performing a domain analysis to find out commonalities
among proposed family members and to estimate how they will vary. On the
other hand, most requirements engineering methods focus on the
specification of a single system. Despite active research efforts to
close this, gap there is still no effective method that allows product
specifications in arbitrary levels of detail for a hierarchical product
family. In particular, it is not possible to combine different
specification mechanisms to produce a complete family specification. The
authors approach these problems by presenting a method that allows
system specifications both in the product line variant as well as the
product family level. This exposes many problems in managing consistency
between different methods to specify families of systems. To achieve
this, our method offers derivation of consistency management support
between different specification levels and among family variants
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