2018-07-09

Software Requirements Specifications Document

CS330 Software Engineering

Software Requirements Specification (SRS) Template

Items that are intended to stay in as part of your document are in bold​;

explanatory comments are in italic text. Plain text is used where you might

insert wording about your project.

The document in this file is an annotated outline for specifying software

requirements, adapted from the IEEE Guide to Software Requirements

Specifications (Std 830-1993).

Tailor this to your needs, removing explanatory comments as you go along.

Where you decide to omit a section, keep the header, but insert a comment

saying why you omit the data.

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Software Requirements Specifications Document

(Project Title)

(Team Name and Number)

(Team Members)

Software Requirements Specification

Document

Version: (n) Date: (mm/dd/yyyy)

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Table of Contents

1. Introduction 5

1.1 Purpose

1.2 Scope

1.3 Definitions, Acronyms, and Abbreviations

1.4 References

1.5 Overview

2. The Overall Description

2.1 Product Perspective

2.1.1 System Interfaces

2.1.2 Interfaces

2.1.3 Hardware Interfaces

2.1.4 Software Interfaces

2.1.5 Communications Interfaces

2.1.6 Memory Constraints

2.1.7 Operations

2.1.8 Site Adaptation Requirements

2.2 Product Functions

2.3 User Characteristics

2.4 Constraints

2.5 Assumptions and Dependencies

2.6 Apportioning of Requirements

3. Specific Requirements

3.1 External interfaces

3.2 Functions

3.3 Performance Requirements

3.4 Logical Database Requirements

3.5 Design Constraints

3.5.1 Standards Compliance

3.6 Software System Attributes

3.6.1 Reliability

3.6.2 Availability

3.6.3 Security

3.6.4 Maintainability

3.6.5 Portability

3.7 Organizing the Specific Requirements

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3.7.1 System Mode

3.7.2 User Class

3.7.3 Objects

3.7.4 Feature

3.7.5 Stimulus

3.7.6 Response

3.7.7 Functional Hierarchy

3.8 Additional Comments

4. Change Management Process

5. Document Approvals

6. Supporting Information

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1. Introduction

The following subsections of the Software Requirements Specifications (SRS) document

should provide an overview of the entire SRS. The thing to keep in mind as you write

this document is that you are telling what the system must do – so that designers can

ultimately build it. Do not use this document for design!!!

1.1 Purpose

Identify the purpose of this SRS and its intended audience. In this subsection, describe the

purpose of the particular SRS and specify the intended audience for the SRS.

1.2 Scope

In this subsection:

(1) Identify the software product(s) to be produced by name

(2) Explain what the software product(s) will, and, if necessary, will not do

(3) Describe the application of the software being specified, including relevant

benefits, objectives, and goals

(4) Be consistent with similar statements in higher-level specifications if they exist

This should be an executive-level summary. Do not enumerate the whole requirements

list here.

1.3 Definitions, Acronyms, and Abbreviations.

Provide the definitions of all terms, acronyms, and abbreviations required to properly

interpret the SRS. This information may be provided by reference to one or more

appendices in the SRS or by reference to documents. This information may be provided

by reference to an Appendix.

1.4 References

In this subsection:

(1) Provide a complete list of all documents referenced elsewhere in the SRS

(2) Identify each document by title, report number (if applicable), date, and

publishing organization

(3) Specify the sources from which the references can be obtained.

This information can be provided by reference to an appendix or to another document. If

your application uses specific protocols or RFC’s, then reference them here so designers

know where to find them.

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1.5 Overview

In this subsection:

(1) Describe what the rest of the SRS contains

(2) Explain how the SRS is organized

Don’t rehash the table of contents here. Point people to the parts of the document they

are most concerned with. Customers/potential users care about section 2, developers

care about section 3.

2. The Overall Description

Describe the general factors that affect the product and its requirements. This section

does not state specific requirements. Instead, it provides a background for those

requirements, which are defined in section 3, and makes them easier to understand. In a

sense, this section tells the requirements in plain English for the consumption of the

customer. Section3 will contain a specification written for the developers.

2.1 Product Perspective

Put the product into perspective with other related products. If the product is

independent and totally self-contained, it should be so stated here. If the SRS defines a

product that is a component of a larger system, as frequently occurs, then this subsection

relates the requirements of the larger system to functionality of the software and

identifies interfaces between that system and the software. If you are building a real

system,compare its similarity and differences to other systems in the marketplace. If you

are doing a research-oriented project, what related research compares to the system you

are planning to build.

A block diagram showing the major components of the larger system, interconnections,

and external interfaces can be helpful. This is not a design or architecture picture. It is

more to provide context, especially if your system will interact with external actors. The

system you are building should be shown as a black box. Let the design document

present the internals.

The following subsections describe how the software operates inside various constraints.

2.1.1 System Interfaces

List each system interface and identify the functionality of the software to accomplish the

system requirement and the interface description to match the system. These are external

systems that you have to interact with. For instance, if you are building a business

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application that interfaces with the existing employee payroll system, what is the API to

that system that designer’s will need to use?

2.1.2 Interfaces

Specify:

(1) The logical characteristics of each interface between the software product and its

users.

(2) All the aspects of optimizing the interface with the person who must use the system

This is a description of how the system will interact with its users. Is there a GUI, a

command line or some other type of interface? Are there special interface requirements?

If you are designing for the general student population for instance, what is the impact of

ADA (American with Disabilities Act) on your interface?

2.1.3 Hardware Interfaces

Specify the logical characteristics of each interface between the software product and the

hardware components of the system. This includes configuration characteristics. It also

covers such matters as what devices are to be supported, how they are to be supported

and protocols. This is not a description of hardware requirements in the sense that “This

program must run on a Mac with 64M of RAM”. This section is for detailing the actual

hardware devices your application will interact with and control. For instance, if you

are controlling X10 type home devices, what is the interface to those devices? Designers

should be able to look at this and know what hardware they need to worry about in the

design. Many business type applications will have no hardware interfaces. If none, just

state “The system has no hardware interface requirements” If you just delete sections

that are not applicable, then readers do not know if: a. this does not apply or b. you

forgot to include the section in the first place.

2.1.4 Software Interfaces

Specify the use of other required software products and interfaces with other application

systems. For each required software product, include:

(1) Name

(2) Mnemonic

(3) Specification number

(4) Version number

(5) Source

For each interface, provide:

(1) Discussion of the purpose of the interfacing software as related to this software

product

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(2) Definition of the interface in terms of message content and format

Here we document the APIs, versions of software that we do not have to write, but that

our system has to use. For instance if your customer uses SQL Server 7 and you are

required to use that, then you need to specify i.e.

2.1.4.1 Microsoft SQL Server 7. The system must use SQL Server as its database

component. Communication with the DB is through ODBC connections. The system

must provide SQL data table definintions to be provided to the company DBA for setup.

A key point to remember is that you do NOT want to specify software here that you think

would be good to use. This is only for customer-specified systems​ that you have to​

interact with. Choosing SQL Server 7 as a DB without a customer requirement is a

Design choice, not a requirement. This is a subtle but important point to writing good

requirements and not over-constraining the design.

2.1.5 Communications Interfaces

Specify the various interfaces to communications such as local network protocols, etc.

These are protocols you will need to directly interact with. If you happen to use web

services transparently to your application then do not list it here. If you are using a

custom protocol to communicate between systems, then document that protocol here so

designers know what to design. If it is a standard protocol, you can reference an existing

document or RFC.

2.1.6 Memory Constraints

Specify any applicable characteristics and limits on primary and secondary memory.

Don’t just make up something here. If all the customer’s machines have only 128K of

RAM, then your target design has got to come in under 128K so there is an actual

requirement. You could also cite market research here for shrink-wrap type applications

“Focus groups have determined that our target market has between 256-512M of RAM,

therefore the design footprint should not exceed 256M.” If there are no memory

constraints, so state.

2.1.7 Operations

Specify the normal and special operations required by the user such as:

(1) The various modes of operations in the user organization

(2) Periods of interactive operations and periods of unattended operations

(3) Data processing support functions

(4) Backup and recovery operations

(Note: This is sometimes specified as part of the User Interfaces section.) If you

separate this from the UI stuff earlier, then cover business process type stuff that would

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impact the design. For instance, if the company brings all their systems down at

midnight for data backup that might impact the design. These are all the work tasks that

impact the design of an application, but which might not be located in software.

2.1.8 Site Adaptation Requirements

In this section:

(1) Define the requirements for any data or initialization sequences that are specific

to a given site, mission, or operational mode

(2) Specify the site or mission-related features that should be modified to adapt the

software to a particular installation

If any modifications to the customer’s work area would be required by your system, then

document that here. For instance, “A 100Kw backup generator and 10000 BTU air

conditioning system must be installed at the user site prior to software installation”.

This could also be software-specific like, “New data tables created for this system must

be installed on the company’s existing DB server and populated prior to system

activation.” Any equipment the customer would need to buy or any software setup that

needs to be done so that your system will install and operate correctly should be

documented here.

2.2 Product Functions

Provide a summary of the major functions that the software will perform. Sometimes the

function summary that is necessary for this part can be taken directly from the section of

the higher-level specification (if one exists) that allocates particular functions to the

software product.

For clarity:

(1) The functions should be organized in a way that makes the list of functions

understandable to the customer or to anyone else reading the document for the first

time.

(2) Textual or graphic methods can be used to show the different functions and their

relationships. Such a diagram is not intended to show a design of a product but

simply shows the logical relationships among variables.

AH, Finally the real meat of section 2. This describes the functionality of the system in

the language of the customer. What specifically does the system that will be designed

have to do? Drawings are good, but remember this is a description of what the system

needs to do, not how you are going to build it. (That comes in the design document).

2.3 User Characteristics

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Describe those general characteristics of the intended users of the product including

educational level, experience, and technical expertise. Do not state specific requirements

but rather provide the reasons why certain specific requirements are later specified in

section 3.

What is it about your potential user base that will impact the design? Their experience

and comfort with technology will drive UI design. Other characteristics might actually

influence internal design of the system.

2.4 Constraints

Provide a general description of any other items that will limit the developer's options.

These can include:

(1) Regulatory policies

(2) Hardware limitations (for example, signal timing requirements)

(3) Interface to other applications

(4) Parallel operation

(5) Audit functions

(6) Control functions

(7) Higher-order language requirements

(8) Signal handshake protocols (for example, XON-XOFF, ACK-NACK)

(2118506792) Reliability requirements

(10) Criticality of the application

(11) Safety and security considerations

This section captures non-functional requirements in the customers language. A more

formal presentation of these will occur in section 3.

2.5 Assumptions and Dependencies

List each of the factors that affect the requirements stated in the SRS. These factors are

not design constraints on the software but are, rather, any changes to them that can

affect the requirements in the SRS. For example, an assumption might be that a specific

operating system would be available on the hardware designated for the software

product. If, in fact, the operating system were not available, the SRS would then have to

change accordingly.

This section is catch-all for everything else that might influence the design of the system

and that did not fit in any of the categories above.

2.6 Apportioning of Requirements.

Identify requirements that may be delayed until future versions of the system. After you

look at the project plan and hours available, you may realize that you just cannot get

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everything done. This section divides the requirements into different sections for

development and delivery. Remember to check with the customer – they should prioritize

the requirements and decide what does and does not get done. This can also be useful if

you are using an iterative life cycle model to specify which requirements will map to

which interation.

3. Specific Requirements

This section contains all the software requirements at a level of detail sufficient to enable

designers to design a system to satisfy those requirements, and testers to test that the

system satisfies those requirements. Throughout this section, every stated requirement

should be externally perceivable by users, operators, or other external systems. These

requirements should include at a minimum a description of every input (stimulus) into the

system, every output (response) from the system and all functions performed by the

system in response to an input or in support of an output. The following principles apply:

(1) Specific requirements should be stated with all the characteristics of a good SRS

● correct

● unambiguous

● complete

● consistent

● ranked for importance and/or stability

● verifiable

● modifiable

● traceable

(2) Specific requirements should be cross-referenced to earlier documents that relate

(3) All requirements should be uniquely identifiable (usually via numbering like

3.1.2.3)

(4) Careful attention should be given to organizing the requirements to maximize

readability (Several alternative organizations are given at end of document)

Before examining specific ways of organizing the requirements it is helpful to understand

the various items that comprise requirements as described in the following subclasses.

This section reiterates section 2, but is for developers not the customer. The customer

buys in with section 2, the designers use section 3 to design and build the actual

application.

Remember this is not design. Do not require specific software packages, etc unless the

customer specifically requires them. Avoid over-constraining your design. Use proper

terminology:

The system shall… A required, must have feature

The system should… A desired feature, but may be deferred til later

The system may… An optional, nice-to-have feature that may never make it to

implementation.

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Each requirement should be uniquely identified for traceability. Usually, they are

numbered 3.1, 3.1.1, 3.1.2.1 etc. Each requirement should also be testable. Avoid

imprecise statements like, “The system shall be easy to use” Well no kidding, what does

that mean? Avoid “motherhood and apple pie” type statements, “The system shall be

developed using good software engineering practice”

Avoid examples, This is a specification, a designer should be able to read this spec and

build the system without bothering the customer again. Don’t say things like, “The

system shall accept configuration information such as name and address.” The designer

doesn’t know if that is the only two data elements or if there are 200. List every piece of

information that is required so the designers can build the right UI and data tables.

3.1 External Interfaces

This contains a detailed description of all inputs into and outputs from the software

system. It complements the interface descriptions in section 2 but does not repeat

information there. Remember section 2 presents information oriented to the

customer/user while section 3 is oriented to the developer.

It contains both content and format as follows:

● Name of item

● Description of purpose

● Source of input or destination of output

● Valid range, accuracy and/or tolerance

● Units of measure

● Timing

● Relationships to other inputs/outputs

● Screen formats/organization

● Window formats/organization

● Data formats

● Command formats

● End messages

3.2 Functions

Functional requirements define the fundamental actions that must take place in the

software in accepting and processing the inputs and in processing and generating the

outputs. These are generally listed as “shall” statements starting with "The system

shall…

These include:

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● Validity checks on the inputs

● Exact sequence of operations

● Responses to abnormal situation, including

● Overflow

● Communication facilities

● Error handling and recovery

● Effect of parameters

● Relationship of outputs to inputs, including

● Input/Output sequences

● Formulas for input to output conversion

It may be appropriate to partition the functional requirements into sub-functions or

sub-processes. This does not imply that the software design will also be partitioned that

way.

3.3 Performance Requirements

This subsection specifies both the static and the dynamic numerical requirements placed

on the software or on human interaction with the software, as a whole. Static numerical

requirements may include:

(a) The number of terminals to be supported

(b) The number of simultaneous users to be supported

(c) Amount and type of information to be handled

Static numerical requirements are sometimes identified under a separate section entitled

capacity.

Dynamic numerical requirements may include, for example, the numbers of transactions

and tasks and the amount of data to be processed within certain time periods for both

normal and peak workload conditions.

All of these requirements should be stated in measurable terms.

For example,

95% of the transactions shall be processed in less than 1 second

rather than,

An operator shall not have to wait for the transaction to complete.

(Note: Numerical limits applied to one specific function are normally specified as part of

the processing subparagraph description of that function.)

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3.4 Logical Database Requirements

This section specifies the logical requirements for any information that is to be placed

into a database. This may include:

● Types of information used by various functions

● Frequency of use

● Accessing capabilities

● Data entities and their relationships

● Integrity constraints

● Data retention requirements

If the customer provided you with data models, those can be presented here. ER

diagrams (or static class diagrams) can be useful here to show complex data

relationships. Remember a diagram is worth a thousand words of confusing text.

3.5 Design Constraints

Specify design constraints that can be imposed by other standards, hardware limitations,

etc.

3.5.1 Standards Compliance

Specify the requirements derived from existing standards or regulations. They might

include:

(1) Report format

(2) Data naming

(3) Accounting procedures

(4) Audit Tracing

For example, this could specify the requirement for software to trace processing activity.

Such traces are needed for some applications to meet minimum regulatory or financial

standards. An audit trace requirement may, for example, state that all changes to a

payroll database must be recorded in a trace file with before and after values.

3.6 Software System Attributes

There are a number of attributes of software that can serve as requirements. It is

important that required attributes by specified so that their achievement can be

objectively verified. The following items provide a partial list of examples. These are

also known as non-functional requirements or quality attributes.

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These are characteristics the system must possess, but that pervade (or cross-cut) the

design. These requirements have to be testable just like the functional requirements. Its

easy to start philosophizing here, but keep it specific.

3.6.1 Reliability

Specify the factors required to establish the required reliability of the software system at

time of delivery. If you have MTBF requirements, express them here. This doesn’t refer

to just having a program that does not crash. This has a specific engineering meaning.

3.6.2 Availability

Specify the factors required to guarantee a defined availability level for the entire system

such as checkpoint, recovery, and restart. This is somewhat related to reliability. Some

systems run only infrequently on-demand (like MS Word). Some systems have to run 24/7

(like an e-commerce web site). The required availability will greatly impact the design.

What are the requirements for system recovery from a failure? “The system shall allow

users to restart the application after failure with the loss of at most 12 characters of

input”.

3.6.3 Security

Specify the factors that would protect the software from accidental or malicious access,

use, modification, destruction, or disclosure. Specific requirements in this area could

include the need to:

● Utilize certain cryptographic techniques

● Keep specific log or history data sets

● Assign certain functions to different modules

● Restrict communications between some areas of the program

● Check data integrity for critical variables

3.6.4 Maintainability

Specify attributes of software that relate to the ease of maintenance of the software itself.

There may be some requirement for certain modularity, interfaces, complexity, etc.

Requirements should not be placed here just because they are thought to be good design

practices. If someone else will maintain the system

3.6.5 Portability

Specify attributes of software that relate to the ease of porting the software to other host

machines and/or operating systems. This may include:

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● Percentage of components with host-dependent code

● Percentage of code that is host dependent

● Use of a proven portable language

● Use of a particular compiler or language subset

● Use of a particular operating system

Once the relevant characteristics are selected, a subsection should be written for each,

explaining the rationale for including this characteristic and how it will be tested and

measured. A chart like this might be used to identify the key characteristics (rating them

High or Medium), then identifying which are preferred when trading off design or

implementation decisions (with the ID of the preferred one indicated in the chart to the

right). The chart below is optional (it can be confusing) and is for demonstrating

tradeoff analysis between different non-functional requirements. H/M/L is the relative

priority of that non-functional requirement.

ID Characteristic H/M/L 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

1 Correctness

2 Efficiency

3 Flexibility

4 Integrity/Security

5 Interoperability

6 Maintainability

7 Portability

8 Reliability

9 Reusability

10 Testability

11 Usability

12 Availability

Definitions of the quality characteristics not defined in the paragraphs above follow.

• Correctness - extent to which program satisfies specifications, fulfills user’s

mission objectives

• Efficiency - amount of computing resources and code required to perform function

• Flexibility - effort needed to modify operational program

• Interoperability - effort needed to couple one system with another

• Reliability - extent to which program performs with required precision

• Reusability - extent to which it can be reused in another application

• Testability - effort needed to test to ensure performs as intended

• Usability - effort required to learn, operate, prepare input, and interpret output

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THE FOLLOWING (3.7) is not really a section, it is talking about how to organize

requirements you write in section 3.2. At the end of this template there are a bunch of

alternative organizations for section 3.2. Choose the ONE best for the system you are

writing the requirements for.

3.7 Organizing the Specific Requirements

For anything but trivial systems the detailed requirements tend to be extensive. For this

reason, it is recommended that careful consideration be given to organizing these in a

manner optimal for understanding. There is no one optimal organization for all systems.

Different classes of systems lend themselves to different organizations of requirements in

section 3. Some of these organizations are described in the following subclasses.

+3.7.1 System Mode

Some systems behave quite differently depending on the mode of operation. When

organizing by mode there are two possible outlines. The choice depends on whether

interfaces and performance are dependent on mode.

3.7.2 User Class

Some systems provide different sets of functions to different classes of users.

3.7.3 Objects

Objects are real-world entities that have a counterpart within the system. Associated

with each object is a set of attributes and functions. These functions are also called

services, methods, or processes. Note that sets of objects may share attributes and

services. These are grouped together as classes.

3.7.4 Feature

A feature is an externally desired service by the system that may require a sequence of

inputs to effect the desired result. Each feature is generally described in as sequence eof

stimulus-response pairs.

3.7.5 Stimulus

Some systems can be best organized by describing their functions in terms of stimuli.

3. 7.6 Response

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Some systems can be best organized by describing their functions in support of the

generation of a response.

3.7.7 Functional Hierarchy

When none of he above organizational schemes prove helpful, the overall functionality

can be organized into a hierarchy of functions organized by either common inputs,

common outputs, or common internal data access. Data flow diagrams and data

dictionaries can be use dot show the relationships between and among the functions and

data.

3.8 Additional Comments

Whenever a new SRS is contemplated, more than one of the organizational techniques

given in 3.7 may be appropriate. In such cases, organize the specific requirements for

multiple hierarchies tailored to the specific needs of the system under specification.

Three are many notations, methods, and automated support tools available to aid in the

documentation of requirements. For the most part, their usefulness is a function of

organization. For example, when organizing by mode, finite state machines or state

charts may prove helpful; when organizing by object, object-oriented analysis may prove

helpful; when organizing by feature, stimulus-response sequences may prove helpful;

when organizing by functional hierarchy, data flow diagrams and data dictionaries may

prove helpful.

In any of the outlines below, those sections called “Functional Requirement i” may be

described in native language, in pseudocode, in a system definition language, or in four

subsections titled: Introduction, Inputs, Processing, Outputs.

4. Change Management Process

Identify the change management process to be used to identify, log, evaluate, and update

the SRS to reflect changes in project scope and requirements. How are you going to

control changes to the requirements. Can the customer just call up and ask for

something new? Does your team have to reach consensus? How do changes to

requirements get submitted to the team? Formally in writing, email or phone call?

5. Document Approvals

Identify the approvers of the SRS document. Approver name, signature, and date should

be used.

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6. Supporting Information

The supporting information makes the SRS easier to use. It includes:

● Table of Contents

● Index

● Appendices

The Appendices are not always considered part of the actual requirements specification

and are not always necessary. They may include:

(a) Sample I/O formats, descriptions of cost analysis studies, results of user

surveys

(b) Supporting or background information that can help the readers of the SRS

(c) A description of the problems to be solved by the software

(d) Special packaging instructions for the code and the media to meet security,

export, initial loading, or other requirements

When Appendices are included, the SRS should explicitly state whether or not the

Appendices are to be considered part of the requirements.

Tables on the following pages provide alternate ways to structure section 3 on the specific

requirements. You should pick the best one of these to organize section 3 requirements.

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Outline for SRS Section 3

Organized by mode: Version 1

3. Specific Requirements

3.1 External interface requirements

3.1.1 User interfaces

3.1.2 Hardware interfaces

3.1.3 Software interfaces

3.1.4 Communications interfaces

3.2 Functional requirements

3.2.1 Mode 1

3.2.1.1 Functional requirement 1.1

.....

3.2.1.n Functional requirement 1.n

3.2.2 Mode 2

.....

3.2.m Mode m

3.2.m.1 Functional requirement m.1

.....

3.2.m.n Functional requirement m.n

3.3 Performance Requirements

3.4 Design Constraints

3.5 Software system attributes

3.6 Other requirements

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Software Requirements Specifications Document

Outline for SRS Section 3

Organized by mode: Version 2

3. Specific Requirements

3.1 Functional Requirements

3.1.1 Mode 1

3.1.1.1 External interfaces

3.1.1.1 User interfaces

3.1.1.2 Hardware interfaces

3.1.1.3 Software interfaces

3.1.1.4 Communications interfaces

3.1.1.2 Functional Requirement

3.1.1.2.1 Functional requirement 1

.....

3.1.1.2.n Functional requirement n

3.1.1.3 Performance

3.1.2 Mode 2

.....

3.1.m Mode m

3.2 Design constraints

3.2118507016 Software system attributes

3.2118507017 Other requirements

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Software Requirements Specifications Document

Outline for SRS Section 3

Organized by user class (i.e. different types of users ->System Adminstrators, Managers,

Clerks, etc.)

3. Specific Requirements

3.1 External interface requirements

3.1.1 User interfaces

3.1.2 Hardware interfaces

3.1.3 Software interfaces

3.1.4 Communications interfaces

3.2 Functional requirements

3.2.1 User class 1

3.2.1.1 Functional requirement 1.1

.....

3.2.1.n Functional requirement 1.n

3.2.2 User class 2

.....

3.2.m User class m

3.2.m.1 Functional requirement m.1

.....

3.2.m.n Functional requirement m.n

3.3 Performance Requirements

3.4 Design Constraints

3.5 Software system attributes

3.6 Other requirements

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Software Requirements Specifications Document

Outline for SRS Section 3

Organized by object (Good if you did an object-oriented analysis as part of your requirements)

3 Specific Requirements

3.1 External interface requirements

3.1.1 User interfaces

3.1.2 Hardware interfaces

3.1.3 Software interfaces

3.1.4 Communications interfaces

3.2 Classes/Objects

3.2.1 Class/Object 1

3.2.1.1 Attributes (direct or inherited)

3.2.1.1.1 Attribute 1

.....

3.2.1.1.n Attribute n

3.2.1.2 Functions (services, methods, direct or inherited)

3.2.1.2.1 Functional requirement 1.1

.....

3.2.1.2.m Functional requirement 1.m

3.2.1.3 Messages (communications received or sent)

3.2.2 Class/Object 2

.....

3.2.p Class/Object p

3.3 Performance Requirements

3.4 Design Constraints

3.5 Software system attributes

3.6 Other requirements

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Software Requirements Specifications Document

Outline for SRS Section 3

Organized by feature (Good when there are clearly delimited feature sets.

3 Specific Requirements

3.1 External interface requirements

3.1.1 User interfaces

3.1.2 Hardware interfaces

3.1.3 Software interfaces

3.1.4 Communications interfaces

3.2 System features

3.2.1 System Feature 1

3.2.1.1 Introduction/Purpose of feature

3.2.1.2 Stimulus/Response sequence

3.2.1.3 Associated functional requirements

3.2.1.3.1 Functional requirement 1

.....

3.2.1.3.n Functional requirement n

3.2.2 System Feature 2

.....

3.2.m System Feature m

.....

3.3 Performance Requirements

3.4 Design Constraints

3.5 Software system attributes

3.6 Other requirements

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Software Requirements Specifications Document

Outline for SRS Section 3

Organized by stimulus (Good for event driven systems where the events form logical

groupings)

3 Specific Requirements

3.1 External interface requirements

3.1.1 User interfaces

3.1.2 Hardware interfaces

3.1.3 Software interfaces

3.1.4 Communications interfaces

3.2 Functional requirements

3.2.1 Stimulus 1

3.2.1.1 Functional requirement 1.1

.....

3.2.1.n Functional requirement 1.n

3.2.2 Stimulus 2

.....

3.2.m Stimulus m

3.2.m.1 Functional requirement m.1

.....

3.2.m.n Functional requirement m.n

3.3 Performance Requirements

3.4 Design Constraints

3.5 Software system attributes

3.6 Other requirements

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Software Requirements Specifications Document

Outline for SRS Section 3

Organized by response (Good for event driven systems where the responses form logical

groupings)

3 Specific Requirements

3.1 External interface requirements

3.1.1 User interfaces

3.1.2 Hardware interfaces

3.1.3 Software interfaces

3.1.4 Communications interfaces

3.2 Functional requirements

3.2.1 Response 1

3.2.1.1 Functional requirement 1.1

.....

3.2.1.n Functional requirement 1.n

3.2.2 Response 2

.....

3.2.m Response m

3.2.m.1 Functional requirement m.1

.....

3.2.m.n Functional requirement m.n

3.3 Performance Requirements

3.4 Design Constraints

3.5 Software system attributes

3.6 Other requirements

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Software Requirements Specifications Document

Outline for SRS Section 3

Organized by functional hierarchy (Good if you have done structured analysis as part of your

design.)

3 Specific Requirements

3.1 External interface requirements

3.1.1 User interfaces

3.1.2 Hardware interfaces

3.1.3 Software interfaces

3.1.4 Communications interfaces

3.2 Functional requirements

3.2.1 Information flows

3.2.1.1 Data flow diagram 1

3.2.1.1.1 Data entities

3.2.1.1.2 Pertinent processes

3.2.1.1.3 Topology

3.2.1.2 Data flow diagram 2

3.2.1.2.1 Data entities

3.2.1.2.2 Pertinent processes

3.2.1.2.3 Topology

.....

3.2.1.n Data flow diagram n

3.2.1.n.1 Data entities

3.2.1.n.2 Pertinent processes

3.2.1.n.3 Topology

3.2.2 Process descriptions

3.2.2.1 Process 1

3.2.2.1.1 Input data entities

3.2.2.1.2 Algorithm or formula of process

3.2.2.1.3 Affected data entities

3.2.2.2 Process 2

3.2.2.2.1 Input data entities

3.2.2.2.2 Algorithm or formula of process

3.2.2.2.3 Affected data entities

.….

3.2.2.m Process m

3.2.2.m.1 Input data entities

3.2.2.m.2 Algorithm or formula of process

3.2.2.m.3 Affected data entities

3.2.3 Data construct specifications

3.2.3.1 Construct 1

3.2.3.1.1 Record type

3.2.3.1.2 Constituent fields

3.2.3.2 Construct 2

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Software Requirements Specifications Document

3.2.3.2.1 Record type

3.2.3.2.2 Constituent fields

…..

3.2.3.p Construct p

3.2.3.p.1 Record type

3.2.3.p.2 Constituent fields

3.2.4 Data dictionary

3.2.4.1 Data element 1

3.2.4.1.1 Name

3.2.4.1.2 Representation

3.2.4.1.3 Units/Format

3.2.4.1.4 Precision/Accuracy

3.2.4.1.5 Range

3.2.4.2 Data element 2

3.2.4.2.1 Name

3.2.4.2.2 Representation

3.2.4.2.3 Units/Format

3.2.4.2.4 Precision/Accuracy

3.2.4.2.5 Range

…..

3.2.4.q Data element q

3.2.4.q.1 Name

3.2.4.q.2 Representation

3.2.4.q.3 Units/Format

3.2.4.q.4 Precision/Accuracy

3.2.4.q.5 Range

3.3 Performance Requirements

3.4 Design Constraints

3.5 Software system attributes

3.6 Other requirements

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Software Requirements Specifications Document

Outline for SRS Section 3

Showing multiple organizations (Can’t decide? Then glob it all together)

3 Specific Requirements

3.1 External interface requirements

3.1.1 User interfaces

3.1.2 Hardware interfaces

3.1.3 Software interfaces

3.1.4 Communications interfaces

3.2 Functional requirements

3.2.1 User class 1

3.2.1.1 Feature 1.1

3.2.1.1.1 Introduction/Purpose of feature

3.2.1.1.2 Stimulus/Response sequence

3.2.1.1.3 Associated functional requirements

3.2.1.2 Feature 1.2

3.2.1.2.1 Introduction/Purpose of feature

3.2.1.2.2 Stimulus/Response sequence

3.2.1.2.3 Associated functional requirements

…..

3.2.1.m Feature 1.m

3.2.1.m.1 Introduction/Purpose of feature

3.2.1.m.2 Stimulus/Response sequence

3.2.1.m.3 Associated functional requirements

3.2.2 User class 2

.....

3.2.n User class n

.....

3.3 Performance Requirements

3.4 Design Constraints

3.5 Software system attributes

3.6 Other requirements

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Software Requirements Specifications Document

Outline for SRS Section 3

Organized by Use Case (Good when following UML development)

3. Specific Requirements

3.1 External Actor Descriptions

3.1.1 Human Actors

3.1.2 Hardware Actors

3.1.3 Software System Actors

3.2 Use Case Descriptions

3.2.1 Use Case 1

3.2.2 Use Case 2

3.2.n Use Case n

3.3 Performance Requirements

3.4 Design Constraints

3.5 Software system attributes

3.6 Other requirements

Q:\IRM\PRIVATE\INITIATI\QA\QAPLAN\SRSPLAN.doc Page 30 of 30

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