Tool Mentor:
Managing Dependencies Using Rational RequisitePro«
Purpose
This tool mentor describes how to use Rational RequisitePro to manage
dependencies by using requirement
attributes and traceability.
Related Rational Unified Process activity:
In the Requirements
Workflow:
Overview
RequisitePro enables you to create and maintain a clear organization of requirements
which groups them according to user-defined attributes, such as function,
priority, risk, cost, or other factors. In addition, you can establish
hierarchical relationships that represent requirements in logical parent/child
groups. Finally, you can create a traceability relationship between two
requirements that establishes dependency from one requirement to the other.
Click one of the following to examine these requirements management concepts
and procedures in more detail.
Functional organization can be expressed in requirement types. A requirement
type is simply a class of requirements that enable teams to organize
large numbers of requirements into meaningful and more manageable groups.
Establishing different types of requirements in a project helps team members
classify requirements and communicate more clearly.
Usually, one type of requirement can be decomposed into other types. For
example, business rules and vision statements typically include high-level
requirements from which teams derive user needs, features, and product
requirement types. Use cases drive design requirements that can be used to
define software requirements. Test requirements are derived from the software
requirements and break down into specific test procedures.
When there are hundreds, thousands, or even tens of thousands of requirements
in a given project, classifying requirements into types makes the project more
manageable. Using RequisitePro, you can create requirements of a given type in a
requirements document or directly into the project database. Each requirement
type has specific attributes that are unique to that requirement.
Tool Steps
To create requirement
types:
- Select Project > Open, select the
project and check the "Exclusive" checkbox. (The
project must be opened in exclusive mode to create new requirement types).
Click OK.
- Select Project > Properties. Click
the Requirement Types tab. Click Add.
Enter the requirement type information (name, description, tag prefix, color
and style of the requirement format). Click OK.
To create requirements
in a document:
- In the document, select the text to define the requirement.
- In the Word Workplace, do one of the following:
- right-click and select Create Requirement.
- click RequisitePro > Requirement
> Create.
The Requirement Properties dialog box appears.
- Click the tabs to enter the appropriate information to define the
requirement. Click OK.
To create requirements in the Views Workplace:
- In the Views Workplace, open an attribute matrix based on the requirement
type for the requirement you want to create.
- Do one of the following:
- click in the field marked <Click here to create a
requirement>.
- click Requirement > Create.
The Requirement Properties dialog box appears.
- Type a description of the requirement.
- Press the Tab key to move across the matrix. Enter
attribute values, as needed, in the matrix.
- Tab through the end of the matrix or click elsewhere to enter the
requirement.
You can also open an existing requirement in an attribute matrix by
double-clicking on its description or selecting the requirement and
clicking Requirement > Properties.
The Requirement Properties dialog box appears. On the General
tab, you can modify the text for the requirement. Click the Attributes
tab and select the appropriate values for the attributes.
For More Information
Refer to the following help topics in the RequisitePro online help:
- Creating and modifying requirement types (Index: requirement
types > creating)
- Creating requirements in a document (Index: requirements
> creating)
- Creating requirements in a view (Index: requirements
> creating)
Manage dependencies in hierarchical relationships. Hierarchical
requirement relationships are parent-child relationships that reflect a logical
grouping between requirements. These associations provide helpful tools for
organizing requirements.
Use hierarchical relationships to subdivide a general requirement into more
explicit requirements. Parent requirements are upper-level, more general
requirements; child requirements are lower-level, more specific requirements.
Each child requirement can only have one parent, but a requirement can be both a
parent and a child.
Note: Hierarchical requirement relationships should not be
confused with traceability relationships. This latter represents relationships
often
between different types of requirements, like software and test requirements,
while hierarchical relationships group requirements of the same type, at the
same level of the requirement traceability tree
Tool Steps
To create child requirements in a document:
- In the requirements document, select the information to define the
requirement.
- In the Word Workplace, do one of the following:
- right-click and select Create Requirement.
- click RequisitePro > Requirement
> Create.
The Requirement Properties dialog box appears.
- Click the tabs and enter the appropriate information to define the
requirement.
- On the Hierarchy tab, select a parent from the Parent
list. If the parent is not displayed in the list, select <choose
parent...>. Click OK.
To create child requirements in the Views Workplace:
- In the Views Workplace, open an attribute matrix based on the requirement
type for the requirement you want to create. Select the requirement that you
want to be the child's parent.
- Click Requirement > Create Child.
Note: You can create a child requirement in the Views Workplace only if the
selected requirement (which will become the child's parent) is also located
in the Views Workplace (i.e., it is not a document-based requirement).
- Type a description for the child requirement.
- Press the Tab key to move across the matrix. Enter
attribute values, as needed, in the matrix.
- Tab through the end of the matrix or click elsewhere to enter the
requirement.
For More Information
Refer to the following help topics in the RequisitePro online help:
- Hierarchical requirement relationships overview (Index:
hierarchical requirements>overview)
- Creating child requirements in documents (Index: hierarchical
requirements>creating child requirements)
- Creating child requirements in a view (Index: hierarchical
requirements>creating child requirements)
- Reparenting a hierarchical requirement (Index: hierarchical
requirements>overview)
Manage dependencies with traceability.
As implied in the description of requirement
types, no single expression of a requirement stands alone. The process of
decomposing user needs into derived requirements implies relationships between
high-level expectations and subsequent artifacts needed for implementation and
validation. In effect, one traces to many or vice versa.
For example, stakeholder requests are related to the product features
proposed to meet them. Product features are traced to individual
requirements for specific functional behavior. Test cases are traced from
the requirements they verify and validate.
In order for teams to determine the impact of changes and feel confident that
the system conforms to expectations, these traceability relationships must be
understood, documented, and maintained. Traceability is an essential tool for
accommodating change and ensuring complete coverage. Establishing clear
requirement types can help make traceability easier to implement and maintain.
Tool Steps
To create requirement traceability:
- In the Views Workplace, click File > New View.
Select the Traceability Matrix view type. Select one
requirement type for the rows and one for the columns of the matrix.
- Select a cell that intersects the two requirements for which you want to
create a traceability relationship. (Use a multiple select action to select
multiple cells.)
- Click Requirement > Trace To or Trace
From. (Or, right-click on the cell and select Trace To
or Trace From.)
For More Information
Refer to the following help topics in the RequisitePro online help:
- Trace to/trace from overview (Index: trace to/trace from
relationship>overview)
- Creating traceability relationships in the Views Workplace (Index:
traceability feature>creating relationships in traceability matrix)
Suspect
Relationships. A relationship between requirements becomes questionable
or suspect if RequisitePro detects that one of the requirements in the
relationship has been modified. If a requirementÆs text is modified, all direct
relationships to and from it become suspect. Additionally, you
can define attributes that, when modified, cause traceability relationships to
become suspect.
Query to retrieve and organize requirements by attribute
values or traceability.
The RequisitePro query features provide a method for filtering and sorting
requirements in views by limiting the values of one or more attributes or by
limiting traceability, and specifying the order in which the filtered
requirements display. Filtering restricts the information being displayed.
Sorting determines the order in which information is displayed. For example, in
an attribute matrix, you may want to use filter criteria to view only those
requirements assigned to you; you can also use sorting criteria to arrange the
requirements from highest to lowest priority.
You filter and sort requirements by applying query criteria to the
requirements and their attributes. These criteria limit the values of the
attributes and/or conditions of the traceability relationships. You can create a
query based on a single attribute value, or you can select multiple attribute
values to create more complex query criteria.
RequisitePro allows you to save and rerun queries with user-defined views in
the Views Workplace. You can dynamically rerun queries to update a requirements
collection, or refresh the returned data with updated values at any time.
Tool Steps
To create a query:
- In the Views Workplace, open an attribute matrix, traceability matrix, or
traceability tree view.
- Click View > Query [Row/Column/Root]
Requirements. If you have not yet added any query criteria, the
Select Attribute dialog box appears.
- Select the attribute and attribute value that you want to use to query,
and click OK.
- For list-type attributes, select one or more values. The logical operator
OR is assumed for list-type attributes. For entry-type attributes, select an
operator and specify the values.
- To create compound queries (with multiple attributes), click Add
and select additional query criteria.
- Click OK.
To save a view:
- In the Views Workplace, click File > Save View.
- Type a name for the view.
- Click either:
Project-wide, which saves the view so other users can open
it; or
Personal, which saves the view so that only the user who
created the view can open it.
- Click OK.
For More Information
Refer to the following help topics in the RequisitePro online help:
- Creating views (Index: Views Workplace > saving views)
- Creating queries (Index: queries > creating)
- Modifying queries (Index: queries > modifying)
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