Pressman Process and Project Metrics
Pressman Process and Project Metrics
- Introduction
- Metrics in the Process Domain
- Metrics in the Project Domain
- Software Measurement
- Integrating Metrics within the Software Process
3
Uses of Measurement
• Can be applied to the software process with the intent of improving it
on a continuous basis
• Can be used to help assess the quality of software work products and
to assist in tactical decision making as a project proceeds
4
Reasons to Measure
• To characterize in order to
– Gain an understanding of processes, products, resources, and
environments
– Establish baselines for comparisons with future assessments
• To evaluate in order to
– Determine status with respect to plans
• To predict in order to
– Gain understanding of relationships among processes and products
– Build models of these relationships
• To improve in order to
– Identify roadblocks, root causes, inefficiencies, and other opportunities for
improving product quality and process performance
5
Metrics in the Process Domain
Metrics in the Process Domain
• Process metrics are collected across all projects and over long periods
of time
• They are used for making strategic decisions
• The intent is to provide a set of process indicators that lead to long-
term software process improvement
• The only way to know how/where to improve any process is to
– Measure specific attributes of the process
– Develop a set of meaningful metrics based on these attributes
– Use the metrics to provide indicators that will lead to a strategy for
improvement
8
Etiquette of Process Metrics
• Use common sense and organizational sensitivity when interpreting
metrics data
• Provide regular feedback to the individuals and teams who collect
measures and metrics
• Don’t use metrics to evaluate individuals
• Work with practitioners and teams to set clear goals and metrics that will
be used to achieve them
• Never use metrics to threaten individuals or teams
• Metrics data that indicate a problem should not be considered “negative”
– Such data are merely an indicator for process improvement
• Don’t obsess on a single metric to the exclusion of other important
metrics
9
Metrics in the Project Domain
Metrics in the Project Domain
• Project metrics enable a software project manager to
– Assess the status of an ongoing project
– Track potential risks
– Uncover problem areas before their status becomes critical
– Adjust work flow or tasks
– Evaluate the project team’s ability to control quality of software work
products
• Many of the same metrics are used in both the process and project
domain
• Project metrics are used for making tactical decisions
– They are used to adapt project workflow and technical activities
11
Use of Project Metrics
• The first application of project metrics occurs during estimation
– Metrics from past projects are used as a basis for estimating time and effort
• As a project proceeds, the amount of time and effort expended are compared
to original estimates
• As technical work commences, other project metrics become important
– Production rates are measured (represented in terms of models created, review
hours, function points, and delivered source lines of code)
– Error uncovered during each generic framework activity (i.e, communication,
planning, modeling, construction, deployment) are measured
– Assess product quality on an ongoing basis and, when necessary, to modify the
technical approach to improve quality
• In summary
– As quality improves, defects are minimized
– As defects go down, the amount of rework required during the project is also
reduced
17
Function-oriented Metrics
18
Function Point Controversy
• Like the KLOC measure, function point use also has proponents and
opponents
• Proponents claim that
– FP is programming language independent
– FP is based on data that are more likely to be known in the early stages of
a project, making it more attractive as an estimation approach
• Opponents claim that
– FP requires some “sleight of hand” because the computation is based on
subjective data
– Counts of the information domain can be difficult to collect after the fact
– FP has no direct physical meaning…it’s just a number
19
Reconciling LOC and FP Metrics
• Relationship between LOC and FP depends upon
– The programming language that is used to implement the software
– The quality of the design
• FP and LOC have been found to be relatively accurate predictors of
software development effort and cost
– However, a historical baseline of information must first be established
• LOC and FP can be used to estimate object-oriented software projects
– However, they do not provide enough granularity for the schedule and
effort adjustments required in the iterations of an evolutionary or
incremental process
• The table on the next slide provides a rough estimate of the average
LOC to one FP in various programming languages
20
LOC Per Function Point
Language Average Median Low High
Ada 154 -- 104 205
Assembler 337 315 91 694
C 162 109 33 704
C++ 66 53 29 178
COBOL 77 77 14 400
Java 55 53 9 214
PL/1 78 67 22 263
Visual Basic 47 42 16 158
www.qsm.com/?q=resources/function-point-languages-table/index.html
21
Object-oriented Metrics
• Number of scenario scripts (i.e., use cases)
– This number is directly related to the size of an application and to the
number of test cases required to test the system
• Number of key classes (the highly independent components)
– Key classes are defined early in object-oriented analysis and are central to
the problem domain
– This number indicates the amount of effort required to develop the
software
– It also indicates the potential amount of reuse to be applied during
development
• Number of support classes
– Support classes are required to implement the system but are not
immediately related to the problem domain (e.g., user interface, database,
computation)
– This number indicates the amount of effort and potential reuse
23
Metrics for Software Quality
• Correctness
– This is the number of defects per KLOC, where a defect is a verified lack of
conformance to requirements
– Defects are those problems reported by a program user after the program is
released for general use
• Maintainability
– This describes the ease with which a program can be corrected if an error is
found, adapted if the environment changes, or enhanced if the customer has
changed requirements
– Mean time to change (MTTC) : the time to analyze, design, implement, test, and
distribute a change to all users
• Maintainable programs on average have a lower MTTC
24
Defect Removal Efficiency
• Defect removal efficiency provides benefits at both the project and
process level
• It is a measure of the filtering ability of QA activities as they are
applied throughout all process framework activities
– It indicates the percentage of software errors found before software release
• It is defined as DRE = E / (E + D)
– E is the number of errors found before delivery of the software to the end
user
– D is the number of defects found after delivery
• As D increases, DRE decreases (i.e., becomes a smaller and smaller
fraction)
• The ideal value of DRE is 1, which means no defects are found after
delivery
• DRE encourages a software team to institute techniques for finding as
many errors as possible before delivery
25
Integrating Metrics within the
Software Process
Arguments for Software Metrics
• Most software developers do not measure, and most have little desire
to begin
• Establishing a successful company-wide software metrics program can
be a multi-year effort
• But if we do not measure, there is no real way of determining whether
we are improving
• Measurement is used to establish a process baseline from which
improvements can be assessed
• Software metrics help people to develop better project estimates,
produce higher-quality systems, and get products out the door on time
27
Establishing a Metrics Baseline
• By establishing a metrics baseline, benefits can be obtained at the
software process, product, and project levels
• The same metrics can serve many masters
• The baseline consists of data collected from past projects
• Baseline data must have the following attributes
– Data must be reasonably accurate (guesses should be avoided)
– Data should be collected for as many projects as possible
– Measures must be consistent (e.g., a line of code must be interpreted
consistently across all projects)
– Past applications should be similar to the work that is to be estimated
• After data is collected and metrics are computed, the metrics should be
evaluated and applied during estimation, technical work, project
control, and process improvement
28
Software Metrics Baseline Process
Software
Engineering
Process
Measures
Software Data
Project Collection
Metrics
Metrics
Computation
Software
Product
Indicators
Metrics
Evaluation
29
Getting Started with Metrics
1) Understand your existing process
2) Define the goals to be achieved by establishing a metrics program
3) Identify metrics to achieve those goals
– Keep the metrics simple
– Be sure the metrics add value to your process and product
4) Identify the measures to be collected to support those metrics
31
☺