1、 IEEE Standard for Software Interface for Maintenance Information Collection and Analysis (SIMICA): Common Information Elements Sponsored by the IEEE Standards Coordinating Committee 20 on Test and Diagnosis for Electronic Systems IEEE 3 Park Avenue New York, NY 10016-5997 USA IEEE Standards Coordin
2、ating Committee 20IEEE Std 1636.99-2013IEEE Std 1636.99-2013 IEEE Standard for Software Interface for Maintenance Information Collection and Analysis (SIMICA): Common Information Elements Sponsor IEEE Standards Coordinating Committees on Test and Diagnosis for Electronic Systems (SCC20) Approved 23
3、August 2013 IEEE-SA Standards Board Abstract: This standard is intended to promote and facilitate interoperability between components of SIMICA. The standard defines EXPRESS information models and XML schemas that together define the common information elements supporting these interfaces. Keywords:
4、 automated test system (ATS), eXtensible markup language (XML), IEEE 1636.99, session information, Software Interface for Maintenance Information Collection and Analysis (SIMICA), test results, XML schema The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc. 3 Park Avenue, New York, NY 10016-5
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34、rticipants At the time this IEEE standard was completed, the Diagnostic and Maintenance Control Subcommittee SIMICA CommonWorking Group had the following membership: Mike Seavey, Chair Chris Gorringe Teresa Lopes Ion Neag John Sheppard Timothy Wilmering The following members of the individual ballot
35、ing committee voted on this standard. Balloters may have voted for approval, disapproval, or abstention. Michael Bodkin Bill Brown Malcom Brown Keith Chow David Droste Chris Gorringe Randall Groves Werner Hoelzl Noriyuki Ikeuchi Anand Jain Teresa Lopes Greg Luri William Maciejewski Mukund Modi Charl
36、es Ngethe Leslie Orlidge Peter Richardson Robert Robinson Bartien Sayogo Mike Seavey Krishna Seeburn John Sheppard Gil Shultz Joseph Stanco Walter Struppler Ronald Taylor Benton Vandiver John Vergis Timothy Wilmering Oren Yuen Daidi Zhong When the IEEE-SA Standards Board approved this standard on 23
37、 August 2013, it had the following membership: John Kulick, Chair David J. Law, Vice Chair Richard H. Hulett, Past Chair Konstantinos Karachalios, Secretary Masayuki Ariyoshi Peter Balma Farooq Bari Ted Burse Wael William Diab Stephen Dukes Jean-Philippe Faure Alexander Gelman Mark Halpin Gary Hoffm
38、an Paul Houz Jim Hughes Michael Janezic Joseph L. Koepfinger* Oleg Logvinov Ron Petersen Gary Robinson Jon Walter Rosdahl Adrian Stephens Peter Sutherland Yatin Trivedi Phil Winston Yu Yuan *Member Emeritus Also included are the following non-voting IEEE-SA Standards Board liaisons: Richard DeBlasio
39、, DOE Representative Michael Janezic, NIST Representative Don Messina IEEE Standards Program Manager, Document Development Kathryn Bennett IEEE Standards Program Manager, Technical Program Development Copyright 2013 IEEE. All rights reserved. viIntroduction This introduction is not part of IEEE Std
40、1636.99-2013, IEEE Standard for Software Interface for Maintenance Information Collection and Analysis (SIMICA): Common Information Elements. Maintainers of complex systems require the ability to capture and share historical test and maintenance-related information in a way that supports such activi
41、ties as performance analysis, post-production product improvement, maintenance process improvement, and diagnostic maturation. Principal stakeholders of this project include but are not limited to maintenance organizations within various Departments/Ministries of Defense, the commercial airlines, th
42、e automotive industry, and the telecommunications industry. This standard is being developed as a component of the IEEE 1636 Software Interface for Maintenance Information Collection and Analysis (SIMICA) project. SIMICAs purpose is to specify a software interface for access, exchange, and analysis
43、of product diagnostic and maintenance information. Maintenance action information provides a subset of the data needed to satisfy SIMICIA requirements. The use of formal information models will facilitate exchanging historical maintenance information between information systems and analysis tools. T
44、he models will facilitate creating open system software architectures for maturing system diagnostics. The XML schema described in this standard where appropriate utilizes and references components of the IEEE Std 1671 schema set. It is anticipated that these schemas will be used throughout industri
45、es that utilize diagnostic and maintenance data as an exchange format that can be understood by humans or machines. In order to ensure wide acceptance throughout the user community, the schemas have been designed to encompass a broad range of use cases. To accommodate use cases beyond the released d
46、esign, the schemas provide means for user extensibility. Copyright 2013 IEEE. All rights reserved. viiContents 1. Overview 1 1.1 General 1 1.2 Application of this documents annexes . 2 1.3 Scope . 2 1.4 Referenced IEEE Standards. 2 1.5 Application 2 1.6 Conventions used in this document . 2 2. Norma
47、tive references 4 3. Definitions, acronyms, and abbreviations 4 3.1 Definitions . 4 3.2 Acronyms and abbreviations . 5 4. SIMICA common elements 5 4.1 SIMICA common element partitioning . 5 4.2 Use of the IEEE Std 1671 Common.xsd schema. 6 5. EXPRESS model, EXPRESS-G diagram, and XML schema names an
48、d locations . 6 6. Conformance 8 7. XML schema extensibility 8 Annex A (normative) SimicaCommon XML schema . 10 A.1 SIMICACommon.xsd. 10 Annex B (normative) SimicaCommon EXPRESS models. 17 B.1 SIMICA_COMMON_MODEL_DOT_99 17 B.2 SIMICACommon model EXPRESS-G diagrams . 50 Annex C (informative) Bibliogr
49、aphy 58 Copyright 2013 IEEE. All rights reserved. viiiIEEE Standard for Software Interface for Maintenance Information Collection and Analysis (SIMICA): Common Information Elements IMPORTANT NOTICE: IEEE Standards documents are not intended to ensure safety, security, health, or environmental protection, or ensure against interference with or from other devices or networks. Implementers of IEEE Standards documents are responsible for determining and complying with all appropriate safety, security, environmental, health, and interference protection practices and all appl