Issue 7813: figure 12.5 (uml-qos-ft-ftf) Source: BAE SYSTEMS (Mr. Kevin Dockerill, kevin.dockerill@baesystems.com) Nature: Clarification Severity: Significant Summary: A risk has a Frequency and a Consequence. We usually associate values with each of these (e.g. high, medium and low), but the profile only captures a single value for the risk. Furthermore, we also capture rational for the values (e.g. why we marked the risk as medium). However, there is no attribute (i.e. tag) to capture the rationale for the risk or its values. Resolution: Revised Text: Actions taken: September 30, 2004: received issue March 8, 2006: closed issue Discussion: As risk is defined in the profile, it may have a frequency value, a consequence value and a risk value (see example in figure 12-17). 2. Capturing the rationale of values is useful, and the profile supports this in the sense that the stereotype <<ValueDefinition>> is undefined/underspecified in the profile. When applying the stereotype as the example in figure 12-13, an additional attribute "description" or "rationale" may be added. Disposition: Closed, no change End of Annotations:===== m: webmaster@omg.org Date: 30 Sep 2004 06:28:52 -0400 To: Subject: Issue/Bug Report -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Name: Kevin Dockerill Company: BAE SYSTEMS, Warton, Lancs UK mailFrom: Kevin.dockerill@baesystems.com Notification: No Specification: UML Profile for Modeling Quality of Service and Fault Tolerance Characteristics and Mechanisms Section: fig 12.5 FormalNumber: Ptc/2004-06-01 Version: Draft RevisionDate: 7/21/2004 Page: 56 Nature: Clarification Severity: Significant HTTP User Agent: Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 6.0; Windows NT 5.1) Description A risk has a Frequency and a Consequence. We usually associate values with each of these (e.g. high, medium and low), but the profile only captures a single value for the risk. Furthermore, we also capture rational for the values (e.g. why we marked the risk as medium). However, there is no attribute (i.e. tag) to capture the rationale for the risk or its values.