July 17, 2008

System Design Specification Guidebook Appendix D – Land Systems

System Design Specification Appendix D – Land Systems

Background: “The Marine Corps task-organizes for operations consistent with its statutory tasking to ‘…provide forces of combined arms, including aviation…’ by forming Marine Air Ground Task Force (MAGTF). The MAGTF is a balanced, air-ground combined arms task organization of Marine Corps forces under a single commander, structured to accomplish a specific mission. It is the Marine Corps’ principle organization for all missions across the range of military operations. It is designed to fight, while having the ability to prevent conflicts and control crises. All MAGTFs are task-organized and vary in size and capability according to the assigned mission, threat, and battlespace environment… They are specifically tailored for rapid deployment by air or sea and ideally suited for a forward presence role…All MAGTFs are expeditionary by design and composed of four core elements: a command element, ground combat element, aviation combat element, and a combat service support element.”

The systems which support the Marine warfighter must enable the task organization (from a systems perspective) that is required routinely of our operational forces. Therefore, the interfaces, interoperability, and operability of United States Marine Corps (USMC) systems are critical to effectual support for the warfighter.

Intent: The intent of the System Design Specification (SDS) Guidebook and Appendix D – Land Systems for the Marine Corps is to define the system under consideration for development and acquisition in sufficient detail to inform senior leadership of any significant risks and provide industry with more system design definition earlier in the acquisition process. Critical to meeting this intent is the definition of system interfaces (internal and external) and preferred solutions (i.e. weapons mount for crew served weapon on a wheeled vehicle).

Marine Corps Process: The process that the Marine Corps will follow is depicted below in Figure 1. Figure 2 depicts a general Marine Corps Systems specification tree.

Figure 1: Marine Corps System Engineering Timeline

Figure 2: Marine Corps System Specification Tree

Applicability: The SDS Guidebook and Appendix D – Land Systems shall be used for all Marine Corps Acquisition Category (ACAT) I and II systems in development of SDS requirements in order to provide clarity of purpose through design and engineering detail to senior leadership and industry.

ACAT I and II programs within the Marine Corps typically are categorized into one of the following:

·  Vehicles (excludes aircraft or air vehicles)

·  Weapons System

·  Command and Control (Command, Control, Communications, Computer, Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance) (C4ISR)

o  Business

o  Sensors

o  Intelligence

The Marine Corps acquires aircraft through Naval Air Systems Command and will therefore follow the SDS Guidebook Appendix B - NAVAIRSYSCOM guidance for Marine Corps Aircraft.

Land Systems:

1. Scope

1.1.  Introduction

2.  Operational Requirements

2.1.  Missions

2.2.  Threat

2.3.  Environment

2.4.  Requirements

2.4.1.  Performance Requirements

2.4.1.1.  Derivation of Performance Requirements from Concept of Operations (CONOPS) and Capabilities Development Document (CDD)

2.4.1.1.1.  KPPs

2.4.1.1.2.  KSAs

2.4.1.1.3.  Additional / Derived Attributes

2.4.2.  Capabilities

2.4.2.1.  Derivation of Functional Requirements from Concept of Operations (CONOPS) and Capabilities Development Document (CDD)

2.4.2.1.1.  KPPs

2.4.2.1.2.  KSAs

2.4.2.1.3.  Additional / Derived Attributes

3.  Reference Documents – provide an itemized list of specifications developed during the Systems Engineering process. A specification tree is included above.

3.1.1.1.  System Specification Document - The Functional Baseline is documented in the System/Subsystem Spec. The System/Subsystem Specification specifies the requirements for a system or subsystem and the methods to be used to ensure that each requirement has been met. Requirements pertaining to the system or subsystem's external interfaces may be presented in the SSS or in one or more Interface Requirements Specifications (IRSs) All functional requirements shall be traceable to higher-level capabilities and shall be verifiable by a specific test method. All elements of the SSS will be reviewed at the SRR and the follow-on SFR. A template for the SSS can be found in the DI-IPSC-81431A.

3.1.1.2.  System/Subsystem Design Document - The SSDDs (DI-IPSC-81432) can be used as a guide to SSDD development. Requirements pertaining to the system or subsystem's external interfaces may be presented in the SSDD or in one or more IRSs referenced from the SSDD. The SSDD, possibly supplemented by IRS and IDD is used as the basis for design and qualification testing of a system or subsystem.

3.1.1.3.  Item Detail Specifications (Product Specification, Process Specification, Material Specification) – Uses the same System/Subsystem Specification (DI-IPSC-81431A) as 3.1.1.1 but provides a lower level of requirements detail.

3.1.1.4.  Interface Requirements Document - The IRD (DI-IPSC-81434) specifies the requirements imposed on one or more systems, subsystems, HWCIs, CSCIs, manual operations, or other system components to achieve one or more interfaces among these entities. An IRD can cover any number of interfaces. The IRD can be used to supplement the SSDD and SRS as the basis for design and qualification testing of systems and CSCI’s.

3.1.1.5.  Interface Control Document (DI-CMAN-81248A) - A document that establishes and defines the detailed interface definition between the interface owners of two or more end products of two or more systems, or end products within the same system. The ICD is a tool used to control the defined interface. The ICD can be used to supplement the SSDD and SRS as the basis for design and qualification testing of systems and CSCI’s.

3.1.1.6.  Interface Design Document - The IDD (DI-IPSC-81436) describes the interface characteristics of one or more systems, subsystems, HWCIs, CSCIs, manual operations, or other system components. An IDD may also describe any number of interfaces. The IDD can be used to supplement the System/Subsystem Design Description (SSDD)(DI-IPSC-81432) or Software Design Description (SDD) (DI-IPSC-81435). The IDD and its companion IRS serve to communicate and control interface design decisions.

3.1.1.7.  Software Requirements Specifications – The SRS (DI-IPSC-81433) specifies the requirements for a Computer Software CSCI and the methods to be used to ensure that each requirement has been met. Requirements pertaining to the CSCI external interfaces may be presented in the SRS or in one or more Interface IRS referenced from the SRS. The SRS, possibly supplemented by the IRS, is used as the basis for design and qualification testing of a CSCI.

4.  Design Criteria

4.1.  Standards and Practices – describe the applicability of each of the following directives/ instructions/ practices etc on your program. It is not expected that every program will have a component that addresses each standard and practice – the list should be tailored to those standards that are applicable to the system being described. If you have tailored a particular standard or specification, annotate why that was done and the expected result.

4.1.1.  MIL SPEC / MIL STDs

4.1.2.  Operational Instructions

4.1.3.  SYSCOM Instructions

4.1.4.  Design Standards

4.1.5.  Commercial Standards

4.1.6.  Information Assurance

4.1.7.  Transportability

4.1.8.  Total Force Structure Considerations

4.1.9.  Naval Integration

4.1.10.  Naval Enterprise Architecture Standards

4.1.11.  Open System Architecture Standards (all SDS systems are required to perform an open architecture self-assessment [tool provided at https://acc.dau.mil/oa] and document the results, further OA guidance is contained in Appendices C & E)

4.1.12.  System Software Safety Technical Review Panel (SSTRP) Guidance

4.1.13.  Weapon Systems Explosive Safety Review Board (WSESRB) Guidance

4.1.14.  Wartime Reserve Mode Requirements

4.1.15.  NSS Supportability – Bandwidth / Quality of Service Requirements

4.2.  Statutory and Regulatory Requirements – This paragraph should describe the statutory and regulatory requirements that apply to the program and the plan for achieving these requirements including the applicable approving authority. Additional information is specified in DoDI 5000.2, Enclosure 3.

5.  Requirements - This section shall be divided into the following paragraphs to specify the system requirements, that is, those characteristics of the system that are conditions for its acceptance. Each requirement shall be assigned a project-unique identifier to support testing and traceability and shall be stated in such a way that an objective test can be defined for it. Each requirement shall be annotated with associated qualification method(s) (see Section 7) and, for subsystems, traceability to system requirements (see Section 6.7), if not provided in those sections. The degree of detail to be provided shall be guided by the following rule: Include those characteristics of the system that are conditions for system acceptance; defer to design descriptions those characteristics that the acquirer is willing to leave up to the developer. If there are no requirements in a given paragraph, the paragraph shall so state. If a given requirement fits into more than one paragraph, it may be stated once and referenced from the other paragraphs.

5.1.  Required states and modes - If the system is required to operate in more than one state or mode having requirements distinct from other states or modes, this paragraph shall identify and define each state and mode. Examples of states and modes include: idle, ready, active, post-use analysis, training, degraded, emergency, back-up, wartime, peacetime. The distinction between states and modes is arbitrary. A system may be described in terms of states only, modes only, states within modes, modes within states, or any other scheme that is useful. If no states or modes are required, this paragraph shall so state, without the need to create artificial distinctions. If states and/or modes are required, each requirement or group of requirements in this specification shall be correlated to the states and modes. The correlation may be indicated by a table or other method in this paragraph, in an appendix referenced from this paragraph, or by annotation of the requirements in the paragraphs where they appear.

5.2.  System capability requirements - This paragraph shall be divided into subparagraphs to itemize the requirements associated with each capability of the system. A "capability" is defined as a group of related requirements. The word "capability" may be replaced with "function," "subject," "object," or other term useful for presenting the requirements.

5.2.1.  Logistics – This section should include performance requirements to support logistical operations throughout the MAGTF. The requirements should include planning and execution of the six functions of Marine Corps logistics (supply, maintenance, transport, health services, general engineering and other services).

5.2.2.  Fires - This section should include hard-kill and soft-kill performance requirements against targets in various environmental and jamming conditions. The requirements should include planning, sensing, control and engagement capabilities. The performance requirements should cover detection ranges, number and types of tracks, reaction time, coverage, firepower, simultaneous engagements, probability of kill, system availability etc.

5.2.3.  Maneuver - This section should include mobility and performance considerations in various terrain and environmental conditions. The requirements should include speed, maneuverability, payload capacity and armament (if any).

5.2.4.  MAGTF Command and Control - This section should include the systems performance regarding planning, command and control and communications for commanders at all levels of the MAGTF (Force, MEF, MEB, MEU) and/or supporting establishment (reach back/reach forward).

5.2.5.  Intelligence - This section should include requirements that enable intelligence operations in various environmental and jamming conditions. The requirements should include planning, sensing and analysis capabilities. The performance requirements should cover detection ranges, number and types of tracks, reaction time, coverage, system availability etc.

5.2.6.  Force Protection - This section should include active and passive measures employed to protect the Force in various environmental and jamming conditions. The requirements should include planning, sensing, control and engagement capabilities. The performance requirements should cover detection ranges, number and types of tracks, reaction time, coverage, survivability, firepower, simultaneous engagements, probability of kill, system availability etc.

5.3.  System external interface requirements - This paragraph shall be divided into subparagraphs to specify the requirements, if any, for the system’s external interfaces. This paragraph may reference one or more Interface Requirements Specifications (IRSs) or other documents containing these requirements.

5.3.1.  Interface identification and diagrams. This paragraph shall identify the required external interfaces of the system. The identification of each interface shall include a project-unique identifier and shall designate the interfacing entities (systems, configuration items, users, etc.) by name, number, version, and documentation references, as applicable. The identification shall state which entities have fixed interface characteristics (and therefore impose interface requirements on interfacing entities) and which are being developed or modified (thus having interface requirements imposed on them). One or more interface diagrams shall be provided to depict the interfaces.

5.3.2.  (Project-unique identifier of interface). This paragraph (beginning with 5.3.2) shall identify a system external interface by project-unique identifier, shall briefly identify the interfacing entities, and shall be divided into subparagraphs as needed to state the requirements imposed on the system to achieve the interface. Interface characteristics of the other entities involved in the interface shall be stated as assumptions or as "When [the entity not covered] does this, the system shall...," not as requirements on the other entities. This paragraph may reference other documents (such as data dictionaries, standards for communication protocols, and standards for user interfaces) in place of stating the information here. The requirements shall include the following, as applicable, presented in any order suited to the requirements, and shall note any differences in these characteristics from the point of view of the interfacing entities (such as different expectations about the size, frequency, or other characteristics of data elements).

5.4.  System internal interface requirements. This paragraph shall specify the requirements, if any, imposed on interfaces internal to the system. If all internal interfaces are left to the design or to requirement specifications for system components, this fact shall be so stated. If such requirements are to be imposed, paragraph 5.3 provides a list of topics to be considered.

5.5.  System internal data requirements. This paragraph shall specify the requirements, if any, imposed on data internal to the system. Included shall be requirements, if any, on databases and data files to be included in the system.

5.6.  Adaptation requirements. This paragraph shall specify the requirements, if any, concerning installation-dependent data that the system is required to provide (such as site dependent latitude and longitude or site-dependent state tax codes) and operational parameters that the system is required to use that may vary according to operational needs (such as parameters indicating operation-dependent targeting constants or data recording).