Project Metrics: Infsy 570 Dr. R. Ocker

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Project Metrics

Infsy 570
Dr. R. Ocker
goal of metrics

to improve product quality and


development-team productivity
concerned with productivity and quality
measures
measures of SW development output as
function of effort and time
measures of usability
terms:
measure
quantitative expression of an attribute of a
product or process
measurement
the act of determining a measure
metric
quantitative measure of the degree to which a
system, component or process possesses an
attribute
terms:

indicator
a metric that provides insight into the SW
process or project
enables manager to adjust (improve) the
process or project
process indicators
allow assessment of process in terms of
what works and what doesnt
Terms:
project indicators
allow manager to
(1) assess status of ongoing project
(2) track project risks
(3) uncover problem areas
(4) adjust tasks or workflow
(5) evaluate teams ability to control quality
metrics apply to

process - used to develop the SW


project - specific SW development
project
product - SW produced

many of the same metrics apply to both


the process and project domains
1. Process metrics and SW
process improvement
How to improve SW quality and
organizational performance?
fig 4.1 text, fig.2 Paulish & Carleton:
Factors that influence quality:
people - skills and experience of SW people
technology - used in development (e.g. CASE)
product complexity
process - glue that ties it all together
motivation to improve process:
results from business need, e.g. strong
competition, need increased profitability
The only rational way to improve any process is
to measure specific attributes of the process,
develop a set of meaningful metrics based on
these attributes, and then use the metrics to
provide indicators that will lead to a strategy for
improvement.
... process metrics are strategic
Process improvement approach
(fig. 3, Paulish et al.)
business need
motivation to improve
assessment (of current practices and
process maturity level)
improvement methods selected
metrics measure impact
Process improvement approach
(fig. 3, Paulish et al.)
business establishes goals to improve
process over period of time
defines measures to gauge progress
when data indicate process problems -
take corrective action
Software process improvement
method
integrated collection of procedures,
tools, and training for increasing
product quality, improving development-
team productivity, or reducing
development time
Some outcomes of an improved
SW process might include:
fewer defects
earlier identification and correction of
defects
faster time to market
better predictability of project schedules
and resources
Types of process metrics:

private vs. public metrics


SW process improvement should begin
at the individual level
some private metrics:

defect rates by individual


defect rates by module
errors found during development
public metrics

use information from individual and


team metrics
some public metrics:
project-level defect rates
effort
calendar times
2. Project Metrics

project metrics are tactical

used by project manager to adapt


project work flow and technical activities
i.e. guide adjustments to work schedule
to avoid delays; assess product quality
on an ongoing basis
attention to metrics should lead
to reduction in project costs:
as quality improves
errors are minimized
rework reduced
estimation

first application of project metrics on


SW project
metrics collected from past projects
used as basis for time and effort
estimates
as project advances, collect production
rates and error metrics
3. Software Measurement

direct measures vs. indirect measures


direct measures

direct measure of process:


cost and effort
direct measure of product:
lines of code (LOC)
execution speed
defects per time period
Indirect measures

indirect measures of product:


functionality
quality
complexity
reliability
maintainability
Consolidation of metrics

individual metrics combined to develop


project metrics
project metrics consolidated to create
process metrics
how to combine metrics from different
projects?
normalization - enables comparison
3.1 Size-oriented metrics
derived by normalizing quality and/or productivity
measures
use size of the SW to normalize
size-oriented measures include:
LOC
effort
$
errors
defects
people
normalizing

suppose choose LOC as normalization


value
then can compare across projects:
errors per KLOC
defects per KLOC
$ per LOC
estimates

very important to estimate the


associated cost of development early in
the development project
to have accurate cost predictions, need
accurate estimates of project size
Software size
primary factor affecting SW cost is the SIZE of
the project
estimating SW size is DIFFICULT
most frequently used metrics for measuring
size:
lines of code (LOC)
function points
some controversy regarding using LOC as key
normalization measure
LOC pros:

easily counted (after the fact, once you


choose a counting method)
used a lot
LOC cons:
lack of universally accepted definition for
what a line of code really is (there are at least
11 different variations for counting LOC)
programming language dependent
difficult to use to estimate project size and
effort - dont have enough information at
beginning of project to accurately estimate
LOC
3.2 Function-oriented Metrics
use a measure of functionality as the
normalization value
formula estimate
functionality cannot be measured directly, but
must be derived using other (direct) measures
method of quantifying size and complexity of
system in terms of functions that system
delivers to user
fig. 4.5 computing function
points
measurement parameter count simple average complex
1. number of user inputs ??? 3 4 6 = X
2. number of user outputs ??? 4 5 7 = X
3. number of inquiries ??? 3 4 6 = X
4. number of files ??? 7 10 15 = X
5. number of external interfaces
??? 5 7 10 = X

count=total XX

You must perform the count:


1. number of user inputs

each unique user input that provides


application-oriented data to the SW
includes input that enter directly as
transactions from the user, and those
that enter as transactions from other
applications (e.g. input file of
transactions)
2. number of user outputs

each user output that provides


application-oriented information to user
(reports, screens, error messages, etc.)
include reports and messages to the
user and reports and messages to other
applications (e.g. files of reports and
messages)
3. number of inquiries

inquiry is an on-line input that results in


generation of an immediate SW
response in form of an on-line output
each distinct inquiry is counted
4. number of internal files

include each logical file or if using a


DB, logical grouping of data, that is
generated, used and maintained by the
application
5. number of external interfaces

files passed or shared between


applications should be counted
i.e., machine-readable interfaces (e.g.,
data files on tape or disk) that are used
to transmit information to another
system are counted
to compute:
1. classify and count the five user function types
2. adjust for processing complexity
determine complexity value associated with each count
can develop criteria for determining whether simple,
average or complex
3. make the function points calculation
FP= count-total X [.65+.01X Fi
Fi (i=1 to 14) are complexity adjustment values
see table 4.1
answer questions such as:
answer questions such as:
Is performance critical?
Are the master files updated on-line?
Is the code designed to be reusable?

Use function points to normalize


measures of SW productivity and quality.
FP Pros:

programming language independent


based on data more likely to be known
early in the project (still need
requirements specs. or design specs.;
see Matson et al.)
FP Cons:

computation based on subjective data


designed to measure business-type
applications (not good for technical or
scientific applications)
4. Metrics for SW Quality

focus on the process, the project and


the product (as do productivity metrics)
Factors that affect quality

product operation - using it


product revision - changing it
product transition - portability
Measuring quality
correctness
degree to which SW performs its
required function
defects per KLOC - most common measure
for correctness
maintainability
ease with which a program can be
corrected, adapted, or enhanced
Measuring quality

MTTC - mean time to change -


simple metric - time it takes to analyze,
implement change, test it, and distribute it
to users
integrity
measures systems ability to withstand
attacks on its security
Measuring quality
usability
quantify user friendliness
measured using 4 characteristics
1. physical/intellectual skill required to learn the
system
2. time required to become moderately efficient
3. net increase in productivity when system used
4. users attitudes toward the system
5. Integrating metrics within
the SW process
majority of SW developers do not
measure
problem is cultural
measurement results in cultural change
resistance, often due to fear
barriers to implementing process
improvement methods (Paulish et al.)
1. getting started
orgs. need to conduct an assessment (e.g. Capability
Maturity Model)
2. staff turnover
downsizing is difficult environment for process
improvement
need champions to stick around
3. dedicated resources
need full-time dedicated resource(s) to implement
process improvement methods
barriers to implementing process
improvement methods (Paulish et al.)
4. management support
its necessary
5. time restrictions
youve got to make the time to institute
it
Some preliminary
recommendations (Paulish et al.)
1. use capability maturity model as guide
to improvement
it provides a framework showing which
methods to use based on current maturity
2. conduct an assessment at beginning
to identify priorities for improvement and
build consensus within org.
Some preliminary
recommendations (Paulish et al.)
3. pick a few process improvement methods
implement these effectively
4. pay attention to implementation of
methods
includes good training and management
5. some process improvement methods
easier to implement than others
remember...cultural factors are
substantial
have significant impact on success with
adopting software process improvement
methods
the collection of quality metrics enables
an organization to tune its software
engineering process to remove the vital
few causes of defects that have the
greatest impact on software development

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