AIR FORCE MIL-HDBK-520 A-2011 SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS DOCUMENT GUIDANCE《系统要求文件指南》.pdf
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1、 NOT MEASUREMENT SENSITIVE MIL-HDBK-520A 19 December 2011 SUPERSEDING MIL-HDBK-520 (USAF) 5 March 2010 DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE HANDBOOK SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS DOCUMENT GUIDANCE This handbook is for guidance only. Do not cite this document as a requirement. AMSC N/A AREA SESS DISTRIBUTION STATEMENT A. App
2、roved for public release; distribution is unlimited. Provided by IHSNot for ResaleNo reproduction or networking permitted without license from IHS-,-,-MIL-HDBK-520A ii FOREWORD 1. This handbook is approved for use by all Departments and Agencies of the Department of Defense (DoD). 2. This handbook w
3、as prepared solely for Government personnel and associated support contract staff. Therefore, many of the links herein require .gov or .mil access using a Common Access Card (CAC). Please report any broken links. 3. This handbook was initially prepared through the Continuous Capability Planning Inte
4、grated Product Team (CCP IPT) under the Develop and Sustain Warfighting Systems (D data or information about data; or descriptive information about an entitys data, data activities, systems, and holdings. For example, discovery metadata is a type of metadata that allows data assets to be found using
5、 enterprise search capabilities (DoDD 8320.02). Provided by IHSNot for ResaleNo reproduction or networking permitted without license from IHS-,-,-MIL-HDBK-520A 6 3.20 Operational Requirements. Top level system performance attributes or capabilities of the system or subsystem documented in the warfig
6、hters capabilities documents. 3.21 Performance Requirements. Requirements defining the extent to which a mission or function should be executed, generally measured in terms of quantity, quality, coverage, timeliness or readiness. 3.22 Regulatory Requirements. Requirements directed by military regula
7、tions and other governmental agencies (DoDI 5000.02). 3.23 Requirements Analysis. Requirements Analysis encompasses definition and refinement of system, subsystem, and lower-level functional and performance requirements and interfaces to facilitate the Architecture Design process. Requirements Analy
8、sis needs to provide measurable and verifiable requirements. Requirements being developed by the materiel developer balance requirements to include performance, functional and technical constraints and both life-cycle costs and development cycle time (DAG, https:/dag.dau.mil). 3.24 Requirements Mana
9、gement. Requirements Management provides traceability back to user-defined capabilities as documented through either the Joint Capabilities Integration and Development System or other user-defined source, and to other sources of requirements. Requirements traceability is one function of requirements
10、 management. As the systems engineering process proceeds, requirements are developed to increasing lower levels of the design. Requirements traceability is conducted throughout the system life cycle and confirmed at each technical review. Traceability between requirements documents and other related
11、 technical planning documents, such as the Test and Evaluation Master Plan, is maintained through a relational data base, numbering standards or other methods that show relationships. A good requirements management system allows for traceability from the lowest level component all the way back to th
12、e user capability document or other source document from which it was derived (DAG, https:/dag.dau.mil). 3.25 Statutory Requirements. Requirements directed by public law (DoDI 5000.02). 3.26 Subsystem. A grouping of items satisfying a logical group of functions within a particular system. 3.27 Synth
13、esis. Translation of input requirements (including performance, function, and interface) into possible solutions (resources and techniques) satisfying those inputs. Defines a physical architecture of people, product and process solutions for logical groupings of requirements (performance, function a
14、nd interface) and then designs those solutions. Provided by IHSNot for ResaleNo reproduction or networking permitted without license from IHS-,-,-MIL-HDBK-520A 7 3.28 System. An integrated composite of people, products and processes that provide a capability to satisfy a stated need or objective. 3.
15、29 Systems Analysis and Control. Imposition of structure and discipline into system evolution by: measuring progress based on demonstrated performance; identifying, developing and examining alternatives; making decisions based on cost, schedule, performance and risk to affect balanced results; docum
16、enting evolution and rationale; and controlling resulting configurations. 3.30 Systems Engineering (SE). Systems engineering is an interdisciplinary approach and process encompassing the entire technical effort to evolve, verify and sustain an integrated and total life cycle balanced set of system,
17、people, and process solutions that satisfy customer needs. Systems engineering is the integrating mechanism for the technical and technical management efforts related to the concept analysis, materiel solution analysis, engineering and manufacturing development, production and deployment, operations
18、 and support, disposal of, and user training for systems and their life cycle processes. (DAG, https:/dag.dau.mil). 3.31 System of Systems (SoS). A set or arrangement of interdependent systems that are related or connected to provide a given capability. The loss of any part of the system will degrad
19、e the performance or capabilities of the whole. An example of an SoS could be interdependent information systems. While individual systems within the SoS may be developed to satisfy the peculiar needs of a given warfighter group (like a specific Service or agency), the information they share is so i
20、mportant that the loss of a single system may deprive other systems of the data needed to achieve even minimal capabilities (Acquisition Community Connection https:/acc.dau.mil/CommunityBrowser.aspx?id=54715). 3.32 Weapon Systems Acquisition Reform Act (WSARA). The Weapon System Acquisition Reform A
21、ct (WSARA) of 2009, Public Law 111-23, May 22, 2009. Weapon Systems Acquisition Reform Act of 2009 One Hundred Eleventh Congress of the United States of America AT THE FIRST SESSION Begun and held at the City of Washington on Tuesday, the sixth day of January, two thousand and nine An Act To improve
22、 the organization and procedures of the Department of Defense for the acquisition of major weapon systems, and for other purposes. Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled (http:/www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/PLAW-111publ23/pdf/PLAW-111pu
23、bl23.pdf) 3.33 Acronyms. ABL Allocated Baseline AF Air Force AFROC Air Force Requirements Oversight Council AFRL Air Force Research Laboratory AFSO21 AF Smart Operations for the 21st Century Provided by IHSNot for ResaleNo reproduction or networking permitted without license from IHS-,-,-MIL-HDBK-52
24、0A 8 AIP Acquisition Improvement Plan AoA Analysis of Alternatives ASC Aeronautical Systems Center C2 Command and Control CAC Common Access Card CBA Capabilities-Based Assessment CBP Capabilities Based Planning CCP Continuous Capability Planning and Contract Change Proposal CCTD Concept Characteriza
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