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  2. Site reliability engineering - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Site_reliability_engineering

    Site Reliability Engineering (SRE) is a discipline in the field of Software Engineering and IT infrastructure support that monitors and improves the availability and performance of deployed software systems and large software services (which are expected to deliver reliable response times across events such as new software deployments, hardware failures, and cybersecurity attacks). [1]

  3. No fault found - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/No_fault_found

    Depiction of the no fault found cycle. Each clockwise cycle after the initial is a waste of maintenance resource. As the figure shows once a fault has been reported, investigated, and no fault found any future problems caused by the fault cause additional work which is a waste of maintainer time.

  4. Reliability, availability, maintainability and safety - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reliability,_availability...

    In engineering, reliability, availability, maintainability and safety (RAMS) [1] [2] is used to characterize a product or system: Reliability: Ability to perform a specific function and may be given as design reliability or operational reliability; Availability: Ability to keep a functioning state in the given environment

  5. Application lifecycle management - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Application_lifecycle...

    A research director with research firm Gartner proposed changing the term ALM to ADLM (Application Development Life-cycle Management) to include DevOps, the software engineering culture and practice that aims at unifying software development (Dev) and software operation (Ops). [3]

  6. Fault tree analysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fault_tree_analysis

    A fault tree diagram. Fault tree analysis (FTA) is a type of failure analysis in which an undesired state of a system is examined. This analysis method is mainly used in safety engineering and reliability engineering to understand how systems can fail, to identify the best ways to reduce risk and to determine (or get a feeling for) event rates of a safety accident or a particular system level ...

  7. Reliability engineering - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reliability_engineering

    Reliability engineering is a sub-discipline of systems engineering that emphasizes the ability of equipment to function without failure. Reliability is defined as the probability that a product, system, or service will perform its intended function adequately for a specified period of time, OR will operate in a defined environment without failure. [1]

  8. Requirements engineering - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Requirements_engineering

    The activities involved in requirements engineering vary widely, depending on the type of system being developed and the organization's specific practice(s) involved. [6] These may include: Requirements inception or requirements elicitation – Developers and stakeholders meet; the latter are inquired concerning their needs and wants regarding ...

  9. Reliability Engineering and Risk Analysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reliability_Engineering...

    Reliability Engineering and Risk Analysis: A Practical Guide (ISBN 9781498745871) is a textbook on techniques for analysis of reliability and risk, written by Mohammad Modarres, Mark Kaminskiy, and Vasiliy Krivtsov.