STANAG_4427_on_CM

STANAG 4427 on CM

STANAG 4427 on CM

Add article description


STANAG 4427 on Configuration Management in System Life Cycle Management is the Standardization Agreement (STANAG) of NATO nations on how to do configuration management (CM) on defense systems. The STANAG, and its supporting NATO publications, provides guidance on managing the configuration of products and services. It is unique in its full life cycle perspective, requiring a Life Cycle CM Plan, and in its approach to contracting for CM, using an ISO standard as the base, and building-up additional requirements (as opposed to the classical tailoring-down).

<!-- Google tag (gtag.js) -->
<script async src="https://www.googletagmanager.com/gtag/js?id=G-S75VHDBZ9S"></script>
<script>
  window.dataLayer = window.dataLayer || [];
  function gtag(){dataLayer.push(arguments);}
  gtag('js', new Date());

  gtag('config', 'G-S75VHDBZ9S');
</script>

History

STANAG 4427 is NATO’s agreement on how to do configuration management on defense systems. Edition 1 was originally promulgated in 1997 and updated with Edition 2 in 2007. The first iteration of the Standardization Agreement was entitled Introduction of Allied Configuration Management Publications (ACMPs), and it called on ratifying nations to use seven NATO publications (ACMP 1-7) as the agreed upon contractual clauses for configuration management.

In 2010, NATO undertook to review and revise the STANAGs and ACMPs with two major assignments: make the NATO guidance useful and extend the guidance through the full project life cycle. This work resulted in the promulgation of STANAG 4427 Edition 3, Configuration Management in System Life Cycle Management, in 2014. As of 2017, it has been ratified by 19 nations.

Overview

With Edition 3, NATO published three new ACMPs: ACMP-2000, Policy on Configuration Management; ACMP-2009, Guidance on Configuration Management; and ACMP-2100, Configuration Management Contractual Requirements. This trio of publications uses a civil standard as the platform (ISO 10007), requires the acquirer to prepare and maintain a Life Cycle CM Plan for the system, to use a combination of governance and insight that is required to achieve the specific system objectives, and to build-up contractual requirements based on defined needs, rather than boilerplates.

NATO publications covered by STANAG 4427 Edition 3[1]

  • ACMP-2000 Ed. A Ver. 2 – Policy on Configuration Management Promulgated
  • ACMP-2009 Ed. A Ver. 2 – Guidance on Configuration Management Promulgated
  • ACMP-2100 Ed. A Ver. 2 – Configuration Management Contractual Requirements
  • ACMP-2009-SRD-10 Ed. A Ver. 1 – Nato CM Training Package Promulgated
  • ACMP-2009-SRD-40 Ed. A Ver. 1 – Predefined Levels of CM Requirement Build-Up
  • ACMP-2009-SRD-41 Ed. A Ver. 2 – Examples of CM Plan Requirements
  • ACMP-2009-SRD-51 Ed. A Ver. 1 – Nci Agency CM Tools Promulgated
  • SRD-2009-49 Ed. A Ver. 1 – NATO-UU Configuration Management Contract Scoping Tool

References

  1. "NATO Standardization Office". nso.nato.int. [not specific enough to verify]

Copies of NATO Configuration Management publications are available, for free, at the NATO Standardization Office web sites below, or at this site:


Share this article:

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article STANAG_4427_on_CM, and is written by contributors. Text is available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 International License; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.