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AV-1 |
OV-1 |
OV-2 |
OV-4 |
OV-5 |
OV-6C |
OV-7 |
SV-2 |
SV-4 |
SV-5 |
SV-6 |
SV-11 |
TV-1 |
TV-2

TV-1 Template. Click to see a larger version
Product Definition. The Technical Standards Profile collects the various systems
standards rules that implement and sometimes constrain the choices that can be made in the
design and implementation of an architecture.
Product Purpose. Primarily, this product is concerned with delineating systems
standards rules and conventions that apply to architecture implementations. When the standards
profile is tied to the system elements to which they apply, TV-1 serves as the bridge between the
SV and TV.
Product Detailed Description. TV-1 consists of the set of systems standards rules that
govern systems implementation and operation of that architecture. The technical standards
generally govern what hardware and software may be implemented and what system data
formats may be used (i.e., the profile delineates which standards may be used to implement the
systems, system hardware/software items, communications protocols, and system data formats).
TV-1 is constructed as part of a given architecture and in accordance with the architecture
purpose. Typically, this will involve starting with one or more overarching reference models or
standards profiles, such as OMB's TRM [OMB, 2003], DoD TRM, or the Joint Technical
Architecture (JTA) [DISA, 2002]. Using these reference models or standards profiles, the
architect should select the service areas relevant to the architecture. The identification of
relevant services within service areas subsequently points to agreed-upon standards. The source
document used for identifying each standard must also be cited.
In most cases, especially in describing architectures with less than a Military Servicewide
scope, TV-1 consists of identifying the applicable portions of the JTA and other existing
technical standards guidance documents, tailoring those portions, as needed, in accordance with
the latitude allowed in these guidance documents, and filling in any gaps. This process of
tailoring standards guidance from higher level, more general guidance, is called creating a
standards profile. For example, a DoD mission area might create a common mission-area
standards profile using TV-1. Each program or project in that mission area would further refine
this common profile to create its own standards profile. Care should be taken in the refinement
process to ensure that systems compliant with the child profile would cont inue to be
interoperable with systems compliant with the parent profile. If service-level JTA-like
documents are used, then the relationship between the JTA and those documents must be stated.
Some of the existing technical standards guidance documents are described in the Deskbook [see
section on URRs in the Deskbook].
For a given domain, TV-1 may also state a common standard implementation for a
particular standard, not just list the standard. Many standards can be implemented in compliant,
but not interoperable ways, such as MIL STD 6016.
The standards are referenced as relationships to the systems, system functions, system
data, hardware/software items or communication protocols in SV-1, SV-2, SV-4, SV-6, OV-7,
and SV-11 products, where applicable. That is, each standard listed in the profile should be
associated with the SV elements that implement or use the standard (e.g., SV-1, SV-2, SV-4,
SV-6, OV-7 and SV-11 element standards, where applicable). Standards for OV-7 and SV-11 do
not include system data standards such as naming conventions, attribute lists, and field types, but
refer to the source for the data entities (e.g., DoD XML Registry), or the data modeling standard
used (e.g., IDEF1X).
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