Maintainability

In engineering, maintainability is the ease with which a product can be maintained in order to:

  • correct defects or their cause,
  • repair or replace faulty or worn-out components without having to replace still working parts,
  • prevent unexpected working conditions,
  • maximize a product's useful life,
  • maximize efficiency, reliability, and safety,
  • meet new requirements,
  • make future maintenance easier, or
  • cope with a changed environment.

In some cases, maintainability involves a system of continuous improvement - learning from the past in order to improve the ability to maintain systems, or improve reliability of systems based on maintenance experience.

In telecommunication and several other engineering fields, the term maintainability has the following meanings:

  • A characteristic of design and installation, expressed as the probability that an item will be retained in or restored to a specified condition within a given period of time, when the maintenance is performed in accordance with prescribed procedures and resources.
  • The ease with which maintenance of a functional unit can be performed in accordance with prescribed requirements.

Software engineering

In software engineering, these activities are known as software maintenance (cf. ISO/IEC 9126). Closely related concepts in the software engineering domain are evolvability, modifiability, technical debt, and code smells.

The maintainability index is calculated with certain formulae from lines-of-code measures, McCabe measures and Halstead complexity measures.

The measurement and track of maintainability are intended to help reduce or reverse a system's tendency toward "code entropy" or degraded integrity, and to indicate when it becomes cheaper and/or less risky to rewrite the code than it is to change it.

 This article incorporates public domain material from the General Services Administration document: "Federal Standard 1037C". (in support of MIL-STD-188)

See also

Further reading

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