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Homepage>IEEE Standards>35 INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY. OFFICE MACHINES>35.040 Character sets and information coding>IEEE 1636-2009 - IEEE Standard for Software Interface for Maintenance Information Collection and Analysis (SIMICA)
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Released: 14.08.2009

IEEE 1636-2009 - IEEE Standard for Software Interface for Maintenance Information Collection and Analysis (SIMICA)

IEEE Standard for Software Interface for Maintenance Information Collection and Analysis (SIMICA)

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Standard number:IEEE 1636-2009
Released:14.08.2009
ISBN:978-0-7381-8170-7
Pages:37
Status:Active
Language:English
DESCRIPTION

IEEE 1636-2009

This standard is an implementation-independent specification for a software interface to information systems containing data pertinent to the diagnosis and maintenance of complex systems consisting of hardware, software, or any combination thereof. These interfaces will support service definitions for creating application programming interfaces (API) for the access, exchange, and analysis of historical diagnostic and maintenance information. The standard will use the information models of IEEE Std 1232 as a foundation.

The purpose of this standard is to specify a software interface for access, exchange, and analysis of product diagnostic and maintenance information. This will address the pervasive need of organizations to assess the effectiveness of diagnostics for complex systems throughout the product life cycle. The use of formal information models will facilitate exchanging historical maintenance information between information systems and analysis tools. The models will facilitate creating open system software architectures for maturing system diagnostics.

New IEEE Standard - Superseded. This document provides an implementation-independent specification for a software interface to information systems containing data pertinent to the diagnosis and maintenance of complex systems consisting of hardware, software, or any combination thereof. These interfaces will support service definitions for creating application programming interfaces (API) for the access, exchange, and analysis of historical diagnostic and maintenance information. This will address the pervasive need of organizations to assess the effectiveness of diagnostics for complex systems throughout the product life cycle. The use of formal information models will facilitate exchanging historical maintenance information between information systems and analysis tools. The models will facilitate creating open system software architectures for maturing system diagnostics.