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1 Software Configuration Management METU Computer Engineering CEng 492 Spring'2004
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1 Software development process: ● The larger the software, the harder to maintain it. ● When a change required: – Who will do it? – How will s/he do it? – How will the change incorporated in the whole software? – How to guarantee change will not inject any other troubles? ● After a change made: – When it is made? – Who made it, why s/he made it?
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1 Software Configuration Management ● Standard definition: – Identification: identifying components, structure – Control: controlling releases and changes – Status accounting: recording, reporting status – Audit and review: validating completeness ● Traditional CM: check-in, check-out of sources, builds, compilation. ● Process Management: control of the software activities (test, documentation, review). Ensuring life-cycle model
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1 Change Control Process ● Evaluate the change request ● Assign individuals to configuration objects ● check-out configuration objects ● make the change ● review (audit) the change ● check-in the changed configuration items ● establish baseline for testing
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1 ● promote changes for inclusion in next release ● rebuild, review ● include in new version ● distribute the new version
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1 Aspects of CM Tools· ● Versioning and version history ● Configurations and versions ● Transparency of CM ● Derived object management ● Workspace management ● Development transactions ● Evolution support ● Activity modeling and automation
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1 Problem Management ● Tightly coupled with CM ● Collecting problems and development issues ● Assigning issues to people ● Status reporting and auditing ● Collecting problems and easily tracking them in the source is essentially important Quality feedback agents Exception dumps
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1 Revision Control Systems ● Example: SCCS, RCS ● Versions of sources, version history (storing in delta differences: SCCS delta, RCS reverse delta) ● Concurrent development (check-in checkout semantics) ● Branches of revisions (i.e. stable, development, experimental) ● Logging, identification ● Merging of revisions
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1 Revision Control with Central Repository ● Examples: CVS, SourceSafe ● Developers work on their copy on a distributed environment. ● Operate on whole SW collection ● Transaction based. Development goes in parallel, conflicts resolved in time of commit.
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1 Software CM Tools ● SCCS, RCS, CVS, Make ● Visual SourceSafe ● Apollo DSEE ● Rational Environment (ClearCase) ● Sun NSE ● IST Istar ● PVCS ● CM Synergy, and many more
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1 A sample CM Plan ● 1 Introduction 1.1 Purpose of CMP 1.2 Scope of Document 1.3 Definitions, Acronyms and Abbreviations 1.4 Document References 1.5 Document Overview
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1 ● 2 The Organizations CM Framework – 2.1 Organization – 2.2 Responsibilities – 2.3 Tools & Infrastructure
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1 ● 3 The CM Process – 3.1 Identification Explain how you will identify the current state of your products and systems. – 3.2 Management and Control Consider Tools and Practices for: Development, Engineering, Build, Deployment, Change Requests, Defect Tracking, System Management. – 3.3 Configuration Status Accounting Define what status updates you will provide and how. Consider: Change Request Reports, Build Reports, Defect Reports, Bill of Materials and Release Reports. – 3.4 Auditing Articulates how your solution will carry out Configuration Management Audits. Things to consider: Functional Audits, Physical Audits and Process Audits.
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1 ● 4 Project Schedules - CM Milestones Provide project planning support/guidelines for CM activities. ● 5 Project Resources ● 6 Plan Optimization ● Appendix
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1 References: ● CMU Software Engineering Institute: http://www.sei.cmu.edu./ ● Association for Configuration and Data Management: http://www.acdm.org/ ● comp.software.config-mgmt FAQ: http://www.daveeaton.com/scm/
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