Practical adaptation of configuration management Three case studies

2006 
This research studies the adaptation of configuration management. Configuration management (CM) is a support process for product development and it operates in the context of the development project. Several factors, such as the size of the project, distribution, development disciplines, etc. affect the project’s CM solution. Nowadays, CM practices inside a project have become an industrial defacto standard, but the complexity emerges from the modern operational environment of product development. Globalisation, outsourcing, product variation and the amount of SW in modern products have characterized the modern product development. This trend has also affected the CM practices, which need to face these new challenges. This study defines the initial framework of factors that affect the CM solution. These factors represent the project characteristics that the CM adaptation needs to solve when planning the CM solution for a project. Even though separate factors can be identified, they coexist and therefore the planning of CM has to take these factors into account singly and together. The framework of factors has been used to characterise three CM adaptation case studies. The case studies represent the two ends of the project types. Case 1 represents a large multisite development project, while cases 2 and 3 represent small SW development projects. The CM practices are considered based on factors in each case and the results are discussed. Furthermore, a cross-case analysis has been carried out to detect and discuss similarities and differences between the cases. The results indicate that the plan-based CM worked well and provided mechanisms for identifying CM solutions that suited the project context despite
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