Tool Mentor: Viewing Requirement History Using Rational RequisitePro
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Tool Mentor: Viewing Requirement History Using Rational RequisitePro
This tool mentor explains how to view the history of a requirement in Rational RequisitePro®.
Tool: Rational RequisitePro
Main Description
Overview
As requirements are modified, the requirement history allows you to keep track of the what, when,
why, and who of these requirement changes. Requirement history provides the following information:
How often do your requirements change? (Too much change too quickly may be indicative of an ill-defined
requirement.)
Who modified a particular requirement? (You may want to consult that person and understand his or her motives
before validating or invalidating that change.)
Why has a requirement changed? (What is the rationale?)
What caused a relationship between two requirements to become "suspect"?
Knowing the history of a requirement is particularly useful during impact analysis, when you are trying to determine
whether a change to one requirement affects requirements to which it is linked.
Tool Steps
This tool mentor introduces the following requirement history procedures:
View the history of a requirement
Perform an impact analysis
Record the history of requirements
1. View the history of a requirement
In RequisitePro, the history of a requirement is located in the Revision tab of the Requirement Properties
dialog box. This dialog box is accessible from either the Microsoft® Word document or a view.
In the Word document:
Position your cursor in the text of a requirement.
Click RequisitePro > Requirement > Properties. The Requirement Properties dialog box
appears.
In a view:
Select the requirement row and do one of the following to open the Requirement Properties dialog box:
Right-click to display the context-sensitive menu, and then click Properties from the pop-up menu.
Click Requirement > Properties.
Do the following:
Click the Revision tab. This pane displays the last change made to that requirement. The date, time,
author, and change description (rationale for the change) are shown.
Click the History button. The Revision History dialog box displays all modifications made to that
requirement since it was created. RequisitePro automatically increases the Revision number as modifications
occur.
Click a revision in the revisions list box to view details about that revision.
Click Print to print the set of revisions for that requirement.
Note: To print revisions pertaining to multiple requirements, use Rational SoDA®, the Rational document
automation tool, to extract any set of revisions from the RequisitePro project and print a Word or Adobe®
FrameMaker document. Alternatively, open the read-only RequisitePro database with an ODBC connection and use a
database reporting tool to query revisions on multiple requirements.
2. Perform an impact analysis
Reviewing the history of a requirement is an important step in impact analysis. One of the reasons you set traceability
links between requirements is to have a means of flagging requirements that might be affected by a change in a related
requirement.
RequisitePro uses a suspect link to denote that the relationship between two related requirements must be
reexamined because one of the requirements has been modified. A suspect link is visually represented in a Traceability
Matrix or a Traceability Tree with a red slash through a traceability arrow. This indicator visually notifies users
that the text or attributes of a requirement have changed and that this change may affect requirements that are traced
to or from the modified requirement.
When a suspect link is displayed, you investigate what caused the suspect link and what effects the change might have
on other requirements. You view the history of the two requirements involved in the suspect link, following the steps
outlined in the first section of this tool mentor (View the history of a requirement). When
you view the history of the modified requirement, you may reach one of the following two conclusions:
The modification to that requirement does not affect the linked requirements. In this case, the suspect link can be
cleared. To clear a suspect link while you are in a traceability view, position your cursor on the suspect link
icon. Right-click to display the context-sensitive menu, and select Clear Suspect.
The modification affects the linked requirements. In this case, the definition of the linked requirements must be
updated to reflect the change before the link is cleared.
To clear a suspect link while you are in a traceability view, double-click the requirement that is affected. Then do
one of the following:
If the requirement was created in a RequisitePro document, RequisitePro opens the document and positions the cursor
on the requirement. Modify the text of the requirement as necessary in light of the related modified requirement,
and then click RequisitePro > Document > Save to commit your changes.
If the requirement was created directly in a view, the Requirement Properties dialog box appears. Modify the
Text box, and click OK to commit your change.
3. Record the history of requirements
The following tips are related to the use of requirements history.
Tip 1: Assign user names to all users
Tip 2: Do not delete requirements
Tip 3: Add revisions to traceability relationships
Tip 4: Always fill in change notification dialogs
Tip 1: Assign user names to all users
An important record in the requirement history is the author of the requirement change. This author is the user logged
into the RequisitePro project at the time the requirement is modified. To record which user logs in, you must enable
the RequisitePro project security.
By default, RequisitePro projects have security disabled. Even if you do not want to set permissions for each project
components (project, documents, requirements, and so on), you should enable security so that you can assign user names
to users. These user names will be entered in the requirement revisions as a user creates or modifies a requirement.
To enable security and create user names, do the following:
Click File > Project Administration > Security. The Project Security dialog box appears.
Select the Enable security for this project check box.
To create user groups:
Click on the Add button located below the Groups box. The Group Permissions dialog box appears.
Type a group name and define permissions for that group. Permissions can be set for specific document types,
requirement types, attributes, and attribute values. You can also define whether this group of users can modify the
project structure. This can include permission to add attributes to requirement types, add document types, and so
forth.
To add an individual user:
Select a group in the Groups list in the Project Security dialog box.
Click the Add button located in the Users of Group box. The Add User dialog box appears.
Enter a username (for example, John Smith); you have the option of typing a password and e-mail address. E-mail
addresses are used when users participate in e-mail group discussions.
Tip 2: Do not delete requirements
RequisitePro allows you to delete requirements. This feature is useful when you first create a project; you may want to
experiment with how to use RequisitePro and what level of detail you want to use for requirements. At some point, you
decide that your project is ready to be maintained as it is. From that point on, you should keep track of every
modification made in the project. Be aware that when RequisitePro deletes requirements, every property of that
requirement is deleted, including its history; this is typically information you do not want to lose. RequisitePro
requires your confirmation before deleting the requirement.
We recommend that you not delete a requirement using the Delete feature. Instead, you can create an attribute
(for example, Deleted or Inactive) to mark requirements as "deleted" (or inactive). You can re-activate that
requirement later by simply changing the value of that attribute.
You might also want to relocate inactive requirements either to the bottom of the document in which they appear or to
the database (so that inactive requirements do not appear in documents). To move requirements that are located in the
Word document (as opposed to those that are located only in a view), follow these steps:
In the Word document, position your cursor in the requirement text.
Click RequisitePro > Requirement > Cut.
In the Explorer, click the Attribute Matrix in which you want to paste the requirements, and then click Edit
> Paste.
Tip 3: Add revisions to traceability relationships
By default, RequisitePro maintains revisions of requirements, not traceability links. To set RequisitePro to also
maintain revisions of traceability links, do the following:
Click Tools > Options.
In the Traceability section, select the check box Changes logged in history.
Click OK.
To verify the traceability history log, open a Traceability Matrix. Add or remove a traceability link between two
requirements. Then select one of the requirements and click Requirements > Properties to open the Requirement
dialog box. At the Revision tab, click History. The traceability change appears in the Revision list.
Tip 4: Always fill in change notification dialogs
As part of good requirement management process, we recommend that project members record their reasons for changing
requirements. RequisitePro provides a Change Description field in which this information can be recorded.
The Change Description field is located on the Revision tab of the Requirement Properties dialog box.
When you save a RequisitePro document containing requirements that have been modified, RequisitePro displays the Change
Notification dialog box for each modified requirement. You can use the Apply to all modified requirements in the
document check box to attach the same Change Description information to all modified requirements (for example,
"per meeting with VP on 5/30/2001").
© Copyright IBM Corp. 1987, 2006. All Rights Reserved.
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