search menu icon-carat-right cmu-wordmark

Architecture-Led Safety Process

Technical Report
Architecture-Led Safety Analysis (ALSA) is a safety analysis method that uses early architecture knowledge to supplement traditional safety analysis techniques to identify faults as early as possible.
Publisher

Software Engineering Institute

CMU/SEI Report Number
CMU/SEI-2016-TR-012
DOI (Digital Object Identifier)
10.1184/R1/6572033.v1

Abstract

Architecture-Led Safety Analysis (ALSA) is a safety analysis method that uses early architecture knowledge to supplement traditional safety analysis techniques to identify faults as early as possible. The method begins by creating a definition of the operational environment within which the system under design will operate. ALSA uses the early architecture knowledge of the system and standardized error guide words to identify hazards in the system. These hazards are analyzed using knowledge of the architecture and safety requirements, intended to mitigate the hazards, that are added to the system’s requirements. ALSA continues its analysis down the full depth of the system implementation hierarchy. As additional implementation details are defined, the hazard analysis is applied to the subcomponents. ALSA also cuts across many of the phases in the development lifecycle. The hazard analysis feeds the requirements definition, architecture definition, and verification and validation phases.

Cite This Technical Report

Feiler, P., Delange, J., Gluch, D., & McGregor, J. (2016, December 21). Architecture-Led Safety Process. (Technical Report CMU/SEI-2016-TR-012). Retrieved April 19, 2024, from https://doi.org/10.1184/R1/6572033.v1.

@techreport{feiler_2016,
author={Feiler, Peter and Delange, Julien and Gluch, David and McGregor, John},
title={Architecture-Led Safety Process},
month={Dec},
year={2016},
number={CMU/SEI-2016-TR-012},
howpublished={Carnegie Mellon University, Software Engineering Institute's Digital Library},
url={https://doi.org/10.1184/R1/6572033.v1},
note={Accessed: 2024-Apr-19}
}

Feiler, Peter, Julien Delange, David Gluch, and John McGregor. "Architecture-Led Safety Process." (CMU/SEI-2016-TR-012). Carnegie Mellon University, Software Engineering Institute's Digital Library. Software Engineering Institute, December 21, 2016. https://doi.org/10.1184/R1/6572033.v1.

P. Feiler, J. Delange, D. Gluch, and J. McGregor, "Architecture-Led Safety Process," Carnegie Mellon University, Software Engineering Institute's Digital Library. Software Engineering Institute, Technical Report CMU/SEI-2016-TR-012, 21-Dec-2016 [Online]. Available: https://doi.org/10.1184/R1/6572033.v1. [Accessed: 19-Apr-2024].

Feiler, Peter, Julien Delange, David Gluch, and John McGregor. "Architecture-Led Safety Process." (Technical Report CMU/SEI-2016-TR-012). Carnegie Mellon University, Software Engineering Institute's Digital Library, Software Engineering Institute, 21 Dec. 2016. https://doi.org/10.1184/R1/6572033.v1. Accessed 19 Apr. 2024.

Feiler, Peter; Delange, Julien; Gluch, David; & McGregor, John. Architecture-Led Safety Process. CMU/SEI-2016-TR-012. Software Engineering Institute. 2016. https://doi.org/10.1184/R1/6572033.v1