Safety-Critical Systems T- 79.232 Ilkka Herttua. Safety Context Diagram HUMANPROCESS SYSTEM -...

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Transcript of Safety-Critical Systems T- 79.232 Ilkka Herttua. Safety Context Diagram HUMANPROCESS SYSTEM -...

Safety-Critical Systems

T- 79.232

Ilkka Herttua

Safety Context Diagram

HUMAN PROCESS

SYSTEM

- Hardware - Software

- Operating Rules

Critical Applications

• Computer based systems used in avionics, chemical process and nuclear power plants.

• A failure in the system endangers human lives directly or through environment pollution. Large scale economic influence.

Safety Definition

• Safety: Safety is a property of a system that it

will not endanger human life or the environment.

• Safety-Critical System: A system that is intended to achieve, on

its own, the necessary level of safety integrity for the implementation of the required safety functions.

Safety Definition

• Safety integrity: The likelihood of a safety-related system

achieving its required safety features under all the stated conditions within a stated operational environment and within a stated period of time.

• SIL levels 0 to 4. • SIL 4 is the highest safety integrity level.

 

Integrity levels

Safety Integrity is a measure of the likelihood of the safety system correctly performing its task.

Safety Integrity levels: (failures/year)

SIL 4 10E-5 – 10E-4SIL 3 10E-4 – 10E-3SIL 2 10E-3 – 10E-2SIL 1 10E-2 – 10E-1

 

Verification and validation

• Verification is the process of determining that a system or module meets its specification.

• Validation is the process of determining that a system is appropriate for its purpose.

 

V - Lifecycle model

SystemAcceptance

System Integration & Test

Module Integration & Test

Requirements Analysis

Requirements Model

Test Scenarios Test Scenarios

SoftwareImplementation

& Unit Test

SoftwareDesign

Requirements Document

Systems Analysis &

Design

Functional / Architechural - Model

Specification Document K

now

led

ge B

ase

** Configuration controlled Knowledge that is increasing in Understanding until Completion of the System:

• Requirements Documentation• Requirements Traceability• Model Data/Parameters• Test Definition/Vectors

Safety Requirements

• Requirements are stakeholders (customer) demands – what they want the system to do. Not defining how !!! => specification

• Safety requirements are defining what the system must do and must not do in order to ensure safety. Both positive and negative functionality.

 

Specification

• Supplier instructions how to build the system. Derived from the required functionality = Requirements.

Requirement R + Domain Knowledge D => Specification S

Where do we go wrong?• Many system failures are not failures to

understand R requirements ; they are mistakes in D domain knowledge– A NYC subway train crashed into the rear end

of another train on 5th June 1995. The motorman ran through a red light. The safety system did apply the emergency brakes. However the ...signal spacing was set in 1918, when trains were shorter, lighter and slower, and the emergency brake system could not stop the train in time.

• Are you sure?

Requirement Engineering Right Requirements

• Ways to refine Requirements

- complete – linking to hazards (possible dangerous events)

- correct – testing & modelling

- consistent – semi/formal language

- unambiguous – text in real English

 

Requirement Engineering

• Methods – Reveal (UK)- All necessary included, right structure and

understandable wording.

• Tools – Doors (Telelogic)- Data base and configuration management- History, traceability and linking

  

REVEAL• REVEAL is a requirements engineering method

(Praxis UK)– independent of particular notations – compatible with different tools

• The application of scientific principles– the role of domain knowledge in relating requirements

to specifications

• Through a systematic process– what has to be done– what order it should be done in– how it can be done

Requirements Managementwith DOORS

Slides provided by Telelogic/ Quality Systems & Software

Dynamic Object Oriented Requirements System

Effizienz

InterfacesRequirements

Links

ReportsAnalysis

Change Proposal SystemFilter, Views

Multiuser-DatabankUser Accounts

Configuration-management

Text ProcessingTemplates, Standards

DOORS

Capture, Link, Trace, Analyse, Administer

Terminology in DOORS

One Document, Group of related Information

Requirements, Tests, Specifications,Change Requests, etc

Consists of numerous ModulesProject

Module

Object

Object

Object

Object Attribute

Attribute

Attribute

Data of a Module

Characteristics of Objects or Links

Date of last Change, Priority, Status, Costs, ...

Relation betweentwo Objects

Links

Traceability in DOORSUser Demands System Requirements Architectur

alDesign

TestPlan

Follow Customer Ammendments through all the Documentation

Traceability - Requirements from Scenarios

Goal hierarchy

user requirements

traceability

Two people shall be able to lift the boat onto the

roof of the average saloon car.

The sailor shall be able to contact the coastguard

when the boat is capsized.

The sailor shall be able to perform a tacking

manoeuvre.

To have sailedand

survived

Ready to sail

Sailed

Returnedhome

Boatloaded

Boat lifted

Boatunloaded

Boatrigged

Boat on car

Mast rigged

Center-plate rigged

Rudder rigged

Gibed

Boatmanoeuvred

Tacked

Cruised

Boatcapsized

Gone ashore

Boat righted

Coast guardcontacted

V - Lifecycle model

SystemAcceptance

System Integration & Test

Module Integration & Test

Requirements Analysis

Requirements Model

Test Scenarios Test Scenarios

SoftwareImplementation

& Unit Test

SoftwareDesign

Requirements Document

Systems Analysis &

Design

Functional / Architechural - Model

Specification Document K

now

led

ge B

ase

** Configuration controlled Knowledge that is increasing in Understanding until Completion of the System:

• Requirements Documentation• Requirements Traceability• Model Data/Parameters• Test Definition/Vectors

Developing safety-related systems

• To achieve safety: - safety requirements - quality management - design / system architecture (RAM) - defined design/manufacture processes - certification and approval processes - known behaviour of the system in all conditions

 

RAM

• Reliability is the probability of a component or system functioning correctly over a given period of time under a given set of operating conditions. (MTBF mean time between failure.)

• The availability of a system is the probability that the system will be functioning correctly at any given time.

• Maintainability: Maintenance is the action taken to retain a system in or return a system to its designed operating condition. (MTTR mean time to repair.)

 

Fault, error and failure

• A fault is defect within the system. Random faults – hardware components, systematic faults

– software/hardware design and manufacture processes.• An error is a deviation from the required operation of the

system or subsystem.• A system failure occurs when the system fails to perform

its required function. (Significant, major and minor)

 

Fault management

Fault management techniques:

• Fault avoidance – in entire system design phase• Fault removal - before system enters service• Fault detection – during service to minimising

effects• Fault tolerance – operate correctly in the presence

of faults 

Home assignments

• 1.12 (primary, functional and indirect safety)

• 2.4 (unavailability)

Email by 14 February to herttua@eurolock.org