System Architecture for C4I Coalition Operations

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A System Architecture for C4I for Coalition Operations Gordon A. Hunt – UDT 2013 Spain Chief Engineer, RTI • UCS WG Sub-Committee Chair • Commander USN-R

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Transcript of System Architecture for C4I Coalition Operations

Page 1: System Architecture for C4I Coalition Operations

A System Architecture for C4I for Coalition Operations

Gordon A. Hunt – UDT 2013 Spain

Chief Engineer, RTI • UCS WG Sub-Committee Chair • Commander USN-R

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Agenda

• Background– Open Architecture and Current Approaches

• A Coalition is a System of Systems– Definitions and Examples

• Interoperability Architecture– It is all about the Data– How to capture and define its meaning– Interoperability by Design

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Background

How Do We ‘Do’ Interoperability?

What is labeled ‘Open’?

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Current Technical Approaches

• Protocol Definitions & Standards– Tell me the messages

• Open Architecture Mandates– Interoperability on Commonality

• (Implementation) Architecture of the Day– Service Oriented Architecture – RESTful Interfaces– …

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Advanced Rapid COTS Insertion(ARCI)

• Focused, single purpose team– Interoperability by design to same spec– i.e. Interoperability by specification

• Short integration cycle– Software- 1 year– Hardware – 2 years

• Coordinated teams• Lessons Learned Include

– Technology – HW/SW– Contracting, Procurement, – Acquisition, Budgeting– Test & Evaluation

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Is Current Practice Working

• Recent studies have shown a growth in interoperability policy issuance in DoD– Thousands of pages of directives, instructions, and mandates– Numerous standards and architecture bodies in the DoD

• No Correlation between Increased Interoperability and Standards– Standards are necessary, but not sufficient for interoperability

• Conventional means of developing platform, unit command, and theater architectures are complex, manpower intensive, and time consuming.– Achieving Interoperability increases complexity– Complexity of systems-of-systems not understood or well

managed

Can’t make complexity go away, just move where it is

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Navy Open System Architecture

• Current signed direction– To coordinate business

practices promoting OA– Construct a limited number

of technical frameworks toimprove and promotecompetition

– Develop an Execution guidebook– Lead and guide the workforce– Metrics to measure ‘openness’ and progress

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Are these Approaches Sufficient?

What is different and unique in coalitions operations?

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SYSTEMS

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System of Systems

System of Systems• A system of systems

is a collection of task-oriented or dedicated systems that pool their resources and capabilities together to create a new, more complex system which offers more functionality and performance than simply the sum of the constituent systems.

System A

System B

System [n]

System A

System B

… System [n]

Has a set of >[n+1] capabilities

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System of Systems Properties

1. Operational independence of the component systems

2. Managerial independence of its component systems

3. Evolutionary Independence of the constituent systems

4. Emergent Behavior

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Key Non-Functional Requirements for a System

• Interchangeability• Replaceability• Extensibility• Integratability

System

System A

System B

System

System B

System C

F(A,B) Results inX

F(C,B)Results inX

A and C provideEqual Capability

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Key Non-Functional Requirements for a System

• Interchangeability• Replaceability• Extensibility• Integratability

System

System A

System B

System

System B

System C

F(A,B)Results inX, Y, Z

F(C,B) Results inY, Z, W

C is NOT an Equal Capability, but it Is a suitable substitute

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System

Key Non-Functional Requirements for a System

• Interchangeability• Replaceability• Extensibility• Integratability

System

System B

System C

F(A,B) Results inX

F(A,B,C)Results inX and Y

System A

System

System B

System A

System C

F(C) Results inY

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System C

Key Non-Functional Requirements for a System

• Interchangeability• Replaceability• Extensibility• Integratability

System B

F(A)Results In X

F(A,B)Results inZ, where Z=G[f(X), g(Y)]

System A

System B

System A

F(B)Results in Y

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The Key Non-Functional Requirement for a SoS

• Interoperabilitythe ability of systems, units, or forces to provide services to and accept services from other systems, units, or forces, and to use the services so exchanged to enable them to operate effectively together.

F(A) and G(B)BecomeG[F(A)] and F[G(B)]

F(A)ResultsIn X

System B

System A

G(B)ResultsIn Y

System of Systems

System B

System A

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Levels of Conceptual Interoperability

Level 0: No Interoperability

Level 1: Technical Interoperability

Level 2: Syntactic Interoperability

Level 3: Semantic Interoperability

Level 4: Pragmatic Interoperability

Level 5: Dynamic Interoperability

Level 6: Conceptual Interoperability

Incr

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apab

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Inte

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n

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Level 0: No Interoperability

• Requires– A stand alone system

• Result– Stand alone systems that

have no interoperability

• Non-Functional Need Met

– None

Level 0: No Interoperability

Level 1: Technical Interoperability

Level 2: Syntactic Interoperability

Level 3: Semantic Interoperability

Level 4: Pragmatic Interoperability

Level 5: Dynamic Interoperability

Level 6: Conceptual Interoperability

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Level 1: Technical Interoperability

• Requires– Communications Infrastructure

established

• Result– Bits & Bytes are exchanged in an

unambiguous manner

• Non-Functional Need Met– Replaceability

Interchangeability

Level 0: No Interoperability

Level 1: Technical Interoperability

Level 2: Syntactic Interoperability

Level 3: Semantic Interoperability

Level 4: Pragmatic Interoperability

Level 5: Dynamic Interoperability

Level 6: Conceptual Interoperability

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Level 2: Syntactic Interoperability

• Requires– Communications Infrastructure

established– Common structure or common

data format for exchanging information

• Result– Bits/Bytes and the Structure of

Data are exchanged in an unambiguous manner

• Non-Functional Need Met– Interchangeability and

IntegrateabilityLevel 0: No Interoperability

Level 1: Technical Interoperability

Level 2: Syntactic Interoperability

Level 3: Semantic Interoperability

Level 4: Pragmatic Interoperability

Level 5: Dynamic Interoperability

Level 6: Conceptual Interoperability

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Level 3: Semantic Interoperability

Level 0: No Interoperability

Level 1: Technical Interoperability

Level 2: Syntactic Interoperability

Level 3: Semantic Interoperability

Level 4: Pragmatic Interoperability

Level 5: Dynamic Interoperability

Level 6: Conceptual Interoperability

• Required– Communications Infrastructure and

Common Data Format are established– Common information model is

defined for exchanging the meaning of information

• Result– Bits/Bytes and the structure of data

are exchanged in an unambiguous manner

– Content of the information exchanged is unambiguously defined

• Non-Functional Need Met– Actual, high-level Interoperability

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Integration by Example

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Interoperation by Example

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Interoperation by Example

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Interoperability by Example

The procedure is actually quite simple. First you arrange things into different groups. Of course, one pile may be sufficient depending on how much there is to do. If you have to go somewhere else due to lack of facilities that is the next step, otherwise you are pretty well set. It is important not to overdo things. That is, it is better to do too few things at once than too many. In the short run this may not seem important but complications can easily arise. A mistake can be expensive as well. At first the whole procedure will seem complicated.

Soon, however, it will become just another facet of life. It is difficult to foresee any end to the necessity for this task in the immediate future, but then one never can tell, After the procedure is completed one arranges the materials into different groups again. Then they can be put into their appropriate places. Eventually they will be used once more and the whole cycle will then have to be repeated. However, that is part of life. 

- Bransford & Johnson (1972)

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It is the Data that Matters

How do you Define & Design it?

What does the Architecture look like?

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MODEL

A model is anything used in any way to represent something else

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DATA MODEL

A data model is a representation that describes the data about the things that exist in your domain

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Systems of Systems are Different

System of

Systems

[n] types of systems

[n]sets of requirements +

the requirement for Semantic

Interoperability

many things to express

many different representations of those expressions

to achieve interoperability

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The SOS Data Model Shall…

1. Meet the requirements of all of the constituent systems

2. Support the overarching requirement for Semantic Interoperability

3. Allow for changes to be made to the model without requiring changes to the existing system and application interfaces that use it

Formal Language

Rigorous Documentation Formal Process

1. 2. 3.

We Need A Formal Approach!© 2013 RTI

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Formal Language for Data Modeling

• Similar to structured, rigorous programming languages

• Ambiguity is not acceptable– Syntax– Semantics

Formal Language

Alphabet

Transformation Rules

Formation Rules

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Semantics, Ambiguity, and Language

Natural Language Representation

• A super charger costs 1500 dollars. I wait until the part goes on sale. I can spend 450 dollars, including 8.25% tax. On Monday, the store discounts everything by 50%. Each day an item is not sold, it is discounted another 25%. How soon can I buy my part?

Formal Language Representation

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Documentation Methodology

• Documenting only your messages is insufficient

• Documentation doesn’t end at the data model– Your system– Key decisions – Context

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Formal Process

• Mandates are insufficient with so many stakeholders

• Can’t dictate everything, must accommodate many things

• SOS DM needs to enforce rigorous well defined processes, not mandate messages

Atomic ElementsElements

of Meaning

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Putting the Pieces Together

Things to Model from

System A

Data Model

Data Modeling Process

Structure

Behavior

Context

representation A

representation A

representation [n]

per a Rigorous and Formal

Approach

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Data Centric Integration Solution

Legacy System A

Mediation

Future System C

Mediation

New System B

Mediation

• Technical Interoperability– Infrastructure &

Protocol

• Syntactic Interoperability– Common Data

Structure

• Semantic Interoperability– Common Data

Definition

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Who is Doing this Currently?

• US OSD and the UCS (UAV Control Segment)– Working Group has built a formal, conceptual model

by which to enforce interoperability.

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RTI’s Data Centric Integration Solution

Connext DDS Professional

DDS-RTPS Wire Interoperability

Messaging

Real-Time Apps DisparateApps/Systems

Integrator

Tools

Administration

Monitoring

Recording

Replay

LoggingSystem Viz

• Connext DDS– Wire Interoperability– Xtypes

• Connext Integrator– Mediation

• Future Evolutions– More powerful– More flexible– More systems.

Working as 1.

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Thoughts On Where We Are and Where We Have to Go…

• OA is an acquisition concept– It is not a specific technical matter

• A large infrastructure to manage OA isn’t needed– No Architecture solely for Architecture

• Interoperability has to be by design– By specification works for small teams

• Processes need to remain flexible– Systems are dynamic

• Need to own the most important aspect of a system, the data.– It content, context, and behavior….

© 2013 RTI