Model Based System Assurance Using the Structured Assurance Case Metamodel
This addresses the problem of inefficient assurance case construction for safety-critical industries, though it is incremental as it builds on an existing standard.
The paper tackles the manual and informal process of constructing assurance cases for system safety/security by explaining the intended usage of the Structured Assurance Case Metamodel (SACM) standard and providing transformations from existing approaches like Goal Structuring Notation and Claims-Arguments-Evidence to SACM, enabling model-based system assurance.
Assurance cases are used to demonstrate confidence in system properties of interest (e.g. safety and/or security). A number of system assurance approaches are adopted by industries in the safety-critical domain. However, the task of constructing assurance cases remains a manual, trivial and informal process. The Structured Assurance Case Metamodel (SACM) is a standard specified by the Object Management Group (OMG). SACM provides a richer set of features than existing system assurance languages/approaches. SACM provides a foundation for model-based system assurance, which has great potentials in growing technology domains such as Open Adaptive Systems. However, the intended usage of SACM has not been sufficiently explained. In addition, there has been no support to interoperate between existing assurance case (models) and SACM models. In this article, we explain the intended usage of SACM based on our involvement in the OMG specification process of SACM. In addition, to promote a model-based approach, we provide SACM compliant metamodels for existing system assurance approaches (the Goal Structuring Notation and Claims-Arguments-Evidence), and the transformations from these models to SACM. We also briefly discuss the tool support for model-based system assurance which helps practitioners to make the transition from existing system assurance approaches to model-based system assurance using SACM.