Abstract
Process measurement occurs in an increasingly dynamic context, characterized by limited resources and by the need to deliver results at the pace of changing technologies, processes and products. Traditional measurement techniques (like the GQM) have been extensively and successfully employed in situations with little or no operating constraints. This paper reports about a measurement project in which –in order to limit the cost and duration of the activities– the team could not perform ad hoc measurements, but had to rely almost exclusively on the data that could be extracted automatically from development and measurement tools already in use. Exploiting the flexibility of the GQM technique, and with the support of a tool supporting the GQM, it was possible to define and execute the measurement plan, to analyze the collected data, and to formulate results in only three months, and spending a very small amount of resources.
Access provided by Autonomous University of Puebla. Download to read the full chapter text
Chapter PDF
Similar content being viewed by others
References
Auer, M., Graser, B., Biffl, S.: A Survey on the Fitness of Commercial Software Metric Tools for Service in Heterogeneous Environments: Common Pitfalls. In: 9th International Software Metrics Symposium (METRICS 2003), Sydney, Australia (September 2003)
Aversano, L., Bodhuin, T., Canfora, G., Tortorella, M.: A Framework for Measuring Business Processes based on GQM. In: 37th Hawaii Int. Conference on System Sciences (2004)
Basili, V.: GQM approach has evolved to include models. IEEE Software 11(1) (1994)
Basili, V., Rombach, H.D.: The TAME project: towards improvement-oriented software environments. IEEE Transactions on Software Engineering (June 1988)
Fuggetta, A., Lavazza, L., Morasca, S., Cinti, S., Oldano, G., Orazi, E.: Applying G/Q/M in an Industrial Software Factory. ACM ToSEM 7(4) (October 1998)
Gresse, C., Rombach, D., Ruhe, G.: Tutorial: A practical approach for building GQM-based measurement programs - Lessons learned from three industrial case studies. In: Proceedings of 10th Brasilian Symposium on Software Engineering, Sao Carlos (Brasil) (1996)
Hall, T., Fenton, N.: Implementing software metrics — the critical success factors. Software Quality Journal 3(4) (December 1994)
Kempkens, R., Rösch, P., Scott, L., Zettel, J.: Instrumenting Measurement Programs with Tools. In: Bomarius, F., Oivo, M. (eds.) PROFES 2000. LNCS, vol. 1840, Springer, Heidelberg (2000)
Lavazza, L.: Providing automated support for the GQM measurement process. IEEE Software 17(3) (May-June 2000)
Lavazza, L., Barresi, G.: Automated Support for Process-aware Definition and Execution of Measurement Plans. In: ICSE 2005, St. Louis (May 2005)
Lavazza, L., Mauri, M.: Measurement tool support in the real world: a GQM experience, CEFRIEL Technical Report RT06001 (March 2006)
Mendonça, M.G., Basili, V.R.: Validation of an Approach for Improving Existing Measurement Frameworks. IEEE TSE 26(6) (June 2000)
van Solingen, R., van Latum, F., Oivo, M., Berghout, E.: Application of software measurement at Schlumberger RPS. In: Proceedings of Sixth European Software Cost Modeling Conference, Paris (1995)
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Editor information
Editors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
Copyright information
© 2006 Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg
About this paper
Cite this paper
Lavazza, L., Mauri, M. (2006). Software Process Measurement in the Real World: Dealing with Operating Constraints. In: Wang, Q., Pfahl, D., Raffo, D.M., Wernick, P. (eds) Software Process Change. SPW 2006. Lecture Notes in Computer Science, vol 3966. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/11754305_9
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/11754305_9
Publisher Name: Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg
Print ISBN: 978-3-540-34199-4
Online ISBN: 978-3-540-34201-4
eBook Packages: Computer ScienceComputer Science (R0)