Requirements engineering tools
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Requirements engineering tools are usually software products to ease the RE processes and allow for more systematic and formalized handling of requirements, change management and traceability.[1]
According to ISO/IEC TR 24766:2009[2], six major tool capabilities exist:
- Requirements elicitation
- Requirements analysis
- Requirements specification
- Requirements verification and validation
- Requirements management
- Other capabilities
RE tools
Name | Vendor | Agile workflow | Licence |
---|---|---|---|
Proprietary software | |||
rmsis | Optimizory |
Special RE tools
Further reading
- Winning the Hidden Battle: Requirements Tool Selection and Adoption[5]
- Evaluation of Open Source Tools for Requirements Management[6]
- A case study of requirements management: Toward transparency in requirements management tools[7]
- Modeling requirements with SysML (IREB, 2015)
- Is requirements engineering still needed in agile development approaches? (IREB, 2015)
- DOORS: A Tool to Manage Requirements[8]
See also
- Requirements engineering
- Requirements management
- Requirements analysis
- Change management (engineering)
- Scope management
- Software development process
- List of Unified Modeling Language tools
- Systems engineering tools
- Application lifecycle management
References
- ^ Carrillo de Gea, Juan M.; Nicolás, Joaquín; Alemán, José L. Fernández; Toval, Ambrosio; Ebert, Christof; Vizcaíno, Aurora (July 2011). "Requirements Engineering Tools". IEEE Software. 28 (4): 86–91. doi:10.1109/MS.2011.81. ISSN 0740-7459.
- ^ 14:00-17:00. "ISO/IEC TR 24766:2009". ISO. Retrieved 2021-03-22.
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has numeric name (help) - ^ Board (IREB), International Requirements Engineering. "ReqInspector – Requirements Engineering Magazine". ReqInspector – Requirements Engineering Magazine. Retrieved 2021-03-22.
- ^ Morais Ferreira, David (2018). Automated Creation of a Database for the Analysis of the Completeness of German Natural Language Requirements. Kaiserslautern.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ Beatty, Joy (July 2013). "Winning the hidden battle: Requirements tool selection and adoption". 2013 21st IEEE International Requirements Engineering Conference (RE). Rio de Janeiro-RJ, Brazil: IEEE: 364–365. doi:10.1109/RE.2013.6636753. ISBN 978-1-4673-5765-4.
- ^ Santana, Sonia R.; Perero, Lucrecia R.; Delduca, Amalia G.; Dapozo, Gladys N. (2020). Pesado, Patricia; Arroyo, Marcelo (eds.). "Evaluation of Open Source Tools for Requirements Management". Computer Science – CACIC 2019. Communications in Computer and Information Science. Cham: Springer International Publishing: 188–204. doi:10.1007/978-3-030-48325-8_13. ISBN 978-3-030-48325-8.
- ^ johan.van.der.heide[at]itea3.org, Johan van der Heide. "09013 AMALTHEA". itea3.org. Retrieved 2021-03-22.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ Hull, Elizabeth; Jackson, Ken; Dick, Jeremy (2010), "DOORS: A Tool to Manage Requirements", Requirements Engineering, London: Springer London, pp. 181–198, doi:10.1007/978-1-84996-405-0_9, ISBN 978-1-84996-404-3, retrieved 2021-03-22
External links
- https://makingofsoftware.com/resources/list-of-rm-tools/ (since 2013)[1]
- www.um.es/giisw/EN/re-tools-survey
- https://www.ppi-int.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/PPI-005107-8-Requirements-Management-Tools-190403-1.pdf
- ^ "About – The Making of Software". Retrieved 2021-03-22.