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Book A.
Introduction

Book B.
7150 Requirements Guidance

Book C.
Topics

Tools,
References, & Terms

SPAN
(NASA Only)

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SWE-037 - Software Milestones
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1. Requirements

2.5.6 The project shall define the milestones at which the software supplier(s) progress will be reviewed and audited as a part of the acquisition activities.

1.1 Notes

Known contract milestones are expected to be included in the resulting contract.

1.2 Applicability Across Classes

Class D not Safety Critical, and Class G are labeled with "P(Center)". This means that an approved Center-defined process that meets a non-empty subset of the full requirement can be used to achieve this requirement.

Class F is labeled as "X(not OTS)" which means that the project is required to meet this requirement for all software that is not considered off-the-shelf.

Class

  A_SC 

A_NSC

  B_SC 

B_NSC

  C_SC 

C_NSC

  D_SC 

D_NSC

  E_SC 

E_NSC

     F      

     G      

     H      

Applicable?

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

    P(C)

   

   

    X

    P(C)

   

Key:    A_SC = Class A Software, Safety-Critical | A_NSC = Class A Software, Not Safety-Critical | ... | - Applicable | - Not Applicable
X - Applicable with details, read above for more | P(C) - P(Center), follow center requirements or procedures

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2. Rationale

For any software project, it is critical for management to review progress early and periodically to ensure the project remains on schedule, is progressing toward implementation of the requirements, and ultimately is addressing the customer's needs. It is also important for management to confirm periodically that the technical goals of the project are being achieved and that the technical direction of the project is appropriate (NASA Systems Engineering Processes and Requirements 041, NPR 7123.1). Milestone reviews provide this type of management visibility into a project.

For software development that is acquired (supplied by a contractor), having regular progress reviews is even more important since these reviews are the keys to ensuring the contractor understood and will provide the product that NASA requested and that meets NASA's requirements for safety, quality, reliability, etc.

Milestone reviews can also serve to facilitate and ensure coordination between multiple development groups including development groups at multiple NASA Centers and contractors.

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3. Guidance

For acquired software development, milestone reviews are incorporated into the contract because the contract is the binding document for contractor performance and deliverables. Regardless of whether the development is in-house or contracted, the development agreement needs to contain, among other key elements, surveillance activities including monitoring activities, reviews, audits, decision points, meetings, etc.

Other items related to milestone reviews to include in the development agreement are:

  • Review periods for deliverables
  • Time period for making corrections to resolve findings
  • Formal reviews, such as those found in NPR 7123.1A 041, NPR 7120.5D 082, NPR 7120.7 264(IT and Institutional Infrastructure) and NPR 7120.8 269(Research and Technology)
  • Technical reviews
  • Progress reviews
  • Acceptance reviews

Consult Center guidance on the following topics as Center guidance may provide insights into reviews and review topics to be considered for inclusion in the SOW and contract:

  • Acquisition
  • Planning
  • Scheduling
  • Process Monitoring and Control (PMC)

See the ?[7.7 - Acquisition Guidance] and [7.3 - Entrance and Exit Criteria] topics in this handbook for additional guidance on this topic. The references in [7.7 - Acquisition Guidance] may provide additional guidance on project milestone reviews and topics for consideration. Topic [7.3 - Entrance and Exit Criteria] describes inputs, material that will be reviewed, and outputs for each life cycle milestone review which may be useful as input to the development of checklists for these reviews.  Consult the NPR 7120 family of requirements documents for definitions of milestones and approaches for different project types.
 
Keep in mind that reviews not included in the contract, may be difficult to require of the contractor, so it is important to ensure the Statement of Work (

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) and other contract elements are reviewed by the proper project management and/or technical authority for completeness.

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4. Small Projects

For projects designated "small" by Center criteria or designate as a high risk via NASA payload risk classifications (NPR 8705.4 048), it may be possible to reduce the number of reviews to meet time and cost constraints. Keep in mind, however, that milestone reviews are not to be eliminated, as these reviews are critical checkpoints in the life cycle of the project. Projects covered by NPR 7120 and NPR 7123.1A 041are required to follow specific project milestone reviews with software components. Small projects need to determine the set of reviews that provide the greatest insights into progress toward the project's technical goals and the technical direction of the project.

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5. Resources


5.1 Tools

Tools to aid in compliance with this SWE, if any, may be found in the Tools Library in the NASA Engineering Network (NEN).

NASA users find this in the Tools Library in the Software Processes Across NASA (SPAN) site of the Software Engineering Community in NEN.

The list is informational only and does not represent an “approved tool list”, nor does it represent an endorsement of any particular tool. The purpose is to provide examples of tools being used across the Agency and to help projects and centers decide what tools to consider.


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6. Lessons Learned

A documented lesson from the NASA Lessons Learned database notes the following:

Acquisition and Oversight of Contracted Software Development (1999). Lesson Number 921: Tailorable acquisition management and oversight processes for NASA contracted software development are essential to ensure that customers receive a quality product. A documented lesson from the NASA Lessons Learned database includes as a cause of the loss of a mission "the lack of a controlled and effective process for acquisition of contractor-developed, mission critical software." In this particular case, the quality of the contractor's product was not monitored as it would have been if the proper milestones for reviewing and auditing contractor progress were in place 528.

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