Road vehicles — Functional safety — Part 2: Management of functional safety

ISO 26262 is intended to be applied to safety-related systems that include one or more electrical and/or electronic (E/E) systems and that are installed in series production passenger cars with a maximum gross vehicle mass up to 3 500 kg. ISO 26262 does not address unique E/E systems in special purpose vehicles such as vehicles designed for drivers with disabilities. Systems and their components released for production, or systems and their components already under development prior to the publication date of ISO 26262, are exempted from the scope. For further development or alterations based on systems and their components released for production prior to the publication of ISO 26262, only the modifications will be developed in accordance with ISO 26262. ISO 26262 addresses possible hazards caused by malfunctioning behaviour of E/E safety-related systems, including interaction of these systems. It does not address hazards related to electric shock, fire, smoke, heat, radiation, toxicity, flammability, reactivity, corrosion, release of energy and similar hazards, unless directly caused by malfunctioning behaviour of E/E safety-related systems. ISO 26262 does not address the nominal performance of E/E systems, even if dedicated functional performance standards exist for these systems (e.g. active and passive safety systems, brake systems, Adaptive Cruise Control). ISO 26262-2:2011 specifies the requirements for functional safety management for automotive applications, including the following: project-independent requirements with regard to the organizations involved (overall safety management), and project-specific requirements with regard to the management activities in the safety lifecycle (i.e. management during the concept phase and product development, and after the release for production).

Véhicules routiers — Sécurité fonctionnelle — Partie 2: Gestion de la sécurité fonctionnelle

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Publication Date
13-Nov-2011
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13-Nov-2011
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9599 - Withdrawal of International Standard
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17-Dec-2018
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INTERNATIONAL ISO
STANDARD 26262-2
First edition
2011-11-15

Road vehicles — Functional safety —
Part 2:
Management of functional safety
Véhicules routiers — Sécurité fonctionnelle —
Partie 2: Gestion de la sécurité fonctionnelle




Reference number
ISO 26262-2:2011(E)
©
ISO 2011

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ISO 26262-2:2011(E)

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©  ISO 2011
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ii © ISO 2011 – All rights reserved

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ISO 26262-2:2011(E)
Contents Page
Foreword . iv
Introduction . v
1  Scope . 1
2  Normative references . 1
3  Terms, definitions and abbreviated terms . 2
4  Requirements for compliance . 2
4.1  General requirements . 2
4.2  Interpretations of tables . 2
4.3  ASIL-dependent requirements and recommendations . 3
5  Overall safety management . 3
5.1  Objective . 3
5.2  General . 3
5.3  Inputs to this clause . 7
5.4  Requirements and recommendations . 7
5.5  Work products . 9
6  Safety management during the concept phase and the product development . 9
6.1  Objectives . 9
6.2  General . 9
6.3  Inputs to this clause . 10
6.4  Requirements and recommendations . 10
6.5  Work products . 17
7  Safety management after the item's release for production . 17
7.1  Objective . 17
7.2  General . 17
7.3  Inputs to this clause . 17
7.4  Requirements and recommendations . 18
7.5  Work products . 18
Annex A (informative) Overview of and workflow of functional safety management . 19
Annex B (informative) Examples for evaluating a safety culture . 20
Annex C (informative) Aim of the confirmation measures . 21
Annex D (informative) Overview of the verification reviews . 23
Annex E (informative) Example of a functional safety assessment agenda (for items that have an
ASIL D safety goal) . 24
Bibliography . 26

© ISO 2011 – All rights reserved iii

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ISO 26262-2:2011(E)
Foreword
ISO (the International Organization for Standardization) is a worldwide federation of national standards bodies
(ISO member bodies). The work of preparing International Standards is normally carried out through ISO
technical committees. Each member body interested in a subject for which a technical committee has been
established has the right to be represented on that committee. International organizations, governmental and
non-governmental, in liaison with ISO, also take part in the work. ISO collaborates closely with the
International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) on all matters of electrotechnical standardization.
International Standards are drafted in accordance with the rules given in the ISO/IEC Directives, Part 2.
The main task of technical committees is to prepare International Standards. Draft International Standards
adopted by the technical committees are circulated to the member bodies for voting. Publication as an
International Standard requires approval by at least 75 % of the member bodies casting a vote.
Attention is drawn to the possibility that some of the elements of this document may be the subject of patent
rights. ISO shall not be held responsible for identifying any or all such patent rights.
ISO 26262-2 was prepared by Technical Committee ISO/TC 22, Road vehicles, Subcommittee SC 3,
Electrical and electronic equipment.
ISO 26262 consists of the following parts, under the general title Road vehicles — Functional safety:
 Part 1: Vocabulary
 Part 2: Management of functional safety
 Part 3: Concept phase
 Part 4: Product development at the system level
 Part 5: Product development at the hardware level
 Part 6: Product development at the software level
 Part 7: Production and operation
 Part 8: Supporting processes
 Part 9: Automotive Safety Integrity Level (ASIL)-oriented and safety-oriented analyses
 Part 10: Guideline on ISO 26262
iv © ISO 2011 – All rights reserved

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ISO 26262-2:2011(E)
Introduction
ISO 26262 is the adaptation of IEC 61508 to comply with needs specific to the application sector of electrical
and/or electronic (E/E) systems within road vehicles.
This adaptation applies to all activities during the safety lifecycle of safety-related systems comprised of
electrical, electronic and software components.
Safety is one of the key issues of future automobile development. New functionalities not only in areas such
as driver assistance, propulsion, in vehicle dynamics control and active and passive safety systems
increasingly touch the domain of system safety engineering. Development and integration of these
functionalities will strengthen the need for safe system development processes and the need to provide
evidence that all reasonable system safety objectives are satisfied.
With the trend of increasing technological complexity, software content and mechatronic implementation, there
are increasing risks from systematic failures and random hardware failures. ISO 26262 includes guidance to
avoid these risks by providing appropriate requirements and processes.
System safety is achieved through a number of safety measures, which are implemented in a variety of
technologies (e.g. mechanical, hydraulic, pneumatic, electrical, electronic, programmable electronic) and
applied at the various levels of the development process. Although ISO 26262 is concerned with functional
safety of E/E systems, it provides a framework within which safety-related systems based on other
technologies can be considered. ISO 26262:
a) provides an automotive safety lifecycle (management, development, production, operation, service,
decommissioning) and supports tailoring the necessary activities during these lifecycle phases;
b) provides an automotive-specific risk-based approach to determine integrity levels [Automotive Safety
Integrity Levels (ASIL)];
c) uses ASILs to specify applicable requirements of ISO 26262 so as to avoid unreasonable residual risk;
d) provides requirements for validation and confirmation measures to ensure a sufficient and acceptable
level of safety being achieved;
e) provides requirements for relations with suppliers.
Functional safety is influenced by the development process (including such activities as requirements
specification, design, implementation, integration, verification, validation and configuration), the production
and service processes and by the management processes.
Safety issues are intertwined with common function-oriented and quality-oriented development activities and
work products. ISO 26262 addresses the safety-related aspects of development activities and work products.
Figure 1 shows the overall structure of this edition of ISO 26262. ISO 26262 is based upon a V-model as a
reference process model for the different phases of product development. Within the figure:
 the shaded “V”s represent the interconnection between ISO 26262-3, ISO 26262-4, ISO 26262-5,
ISO 26262-6 and ISO 26262-7;
 the specific clauses are indicated in the following manner: “m-n”, where “m” represents the number of the
particular part and “n” indicates the number of the clause within that part.
EXAMPLE “2-6” represents Clause 6 of ISO 26262-2.
© ISO 2011 – All rights reserved v

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ISO 26262-2:2011(E)

Figure 1 — Overview of ISO 26262

vi © ISO 2011 – All rights reserved

1. Vocabulary
2. Management of functional safety
2-6 Safety management during the concept phase 2-7 Safety management after the item´s release
2-5 Overall safety management
and the product development for production
3. Concept phase 4. Product development at the system level 7. Production and operation
4-5 Initiation of product
4-11 Release for production
3-5 Item definition 7-5 Production
development at the system level
4-10 Functional safety assessment
7-6 Operation, service
3-6 Initiation of the safety lifecycle
4-6 Specification of the technical
(maintenance and repair), and
safety requirements
decommissioning
4-9 Safety validation
3-7 Hazard analysis and risk
assessment
4-7 System design 4-8 Item integration and testing
3-8 Functional safety
concept
5. Product development at the 6. Product development at the
hardware level software level
5-5 Initiation of product 6-5 Initiation of product
development at the hardware level development at the software level
5-6 Specification of hardware
safety requirements
5-7 Hardware design 6-7 Software architectural design
5-8 Evaluation of the hardware 6-8 Software unit design and
architectural metrics implementation
5-9 Evaluation of the safety goal
6-9 Software unit testing
violations due to random hardware
failures
6-10 Software integration and
5-10 Hardware integration and
testing
testing
6-11 Verification of software safety
requirements
8. Supporting processes
8-5 Interfaces within distributed developments 8-10 Documentation
8-6 Specification and management of safety requirements 8-11 Confidence in the use of software tools
8-7 Configuration management 8-12 Qualification of software components
8-8 Change management 8-13 Qualification of hardware components
8-9 Verification 8-14 Proven in use argument
9. ASIL-oriented and safety-oriented analyses
9-5 Requirements decomposition with respect to ASIL tailoring 9-7 Analysis of dependent failures
9-6 Criteria for coexistence of elements 9-8 Safety analyses
10. Guideline on ISO 26262

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INTERNATIONAL STANDARD ISO 26262-2:2011(E)

Road vehicles — Functional safety —
Part 2:
Management of functional safety
1 Scope
ISO 26262 is intended to be applied to safety-related systems that include one or more electrical and/or
electronic (E/E) systems and that are installed in series production passenger cars with a maximum gross
vehicle mass up to 3 500 kg. ISO 26262 does not address unique E/E systems in special purpose vehicles
such as vehicles designed for drivers with disabilities.
Systems and their components released for production, or systems and their components already under
development prior to the publication date of ISO 26262, are exempted from the scope. For further
development or alterations based on systems and their components released for production prior to the
publication of ISO 26262, only the modifications will be developed in accordance with ISO 26262.
ISO 26262 addresses possible hazards caused by malfunctioning behaviour of E/E safety-related systems,
including interaction of these systems. It does not address hazards related to electric shock, fire, smoke, heat,
radiation, toxicity, flammability, reactivity, corrosion, release of energy and similar hazards, unless directly
caused by malfunctioning behaviour of E/E safety-related systems.
ISO 26262 does not address the nominal performance of E/E systems, even if dedicated functional
performance standards exist for these systems (e.g. active and passive safety systems, brake systems,
Adaptive Cruise Control).
This part of ISO 26262 specifies the requirements for functional safety management for automotive
applications, including the following:
 project-independent requirements with regard to the organizations involved (overall safety management),
and
 project-specific requirements with regard to the management activities in the safety lifecycle (i.e.
management during the concept phase and product development, and after the release for production).
2 Normative references
The following referenced documents are indispensable for the application of this document. For dated
references, only the edition cited applies. For undated references, the latest edition of the referenced
document (including any amendments) applies.
ISO 26262-1:2011, Road vehicles — Functional safety — Part 1: Vocabulary
ISO 26262-3:2011, Road vehicles — Functional safety — Part 3: Concept phase
ISO 26262-4:2011, Road vehicles — Functional safety — Part 4: Product development at the system level
ISO 26262-5:2011, Road vehicles — Functional safety — Part 5: Product development at the hardware level
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ISO 26262-2:2011(E)
ISO 26262-6:2011, Road vehicles — Functional safety — Part 6: Product development at the software level
ISO 26262-7:2011, Road vehicles — Functional safety — Part 7: Production and operation
ISO 26262-8:2011, Road vehicles — Functional safety — Part 8: Supporting processes
ISO 26262-9:2011, Road vehicles — Functional safety — Part 9: Automotive Safety Integrity Level (ASIL)-
oriented and safety-oriented analyses
3 Terms, definitions and abbreviated terms
For the purposes of this document, the terms, definitions and abbreviated terms given in ISO 26262-1:2011
apply.
4 Requirements for compliance
4.1 General requirements
When claiming compliance with ISO 26262, each requirement shall be complied with, unless one of the
following applies:
a) tailoring of the safety activities in accordance with this part of ISO 26262 has been planned and shows
that the requirement does not apply, or
b) a rationale is available that the non-compliance is acceptable and the rationale has been assessed in
accordance with this part of ISO 26262.
Information marked as a “NOTE” or “EXAMPLE” is only for guidance in understanding, or for clarification of
the associated requirement, and shall not be interpreted as a requirement itself or as complete or exhaustive.
The results of safety activities are given as work products. “Prerequisites” are information which shall be
available as work products of a previous phase. Given that certain requirements of a clause are
ASIL-dependent or may be tailored, certain work products may not be needed as prerequisites.
“Further supporting information” is information that can be considered, but which in some cases is not required
by ISO 26262 as a work product of a previous phase and which may be made available by external sources
that are different from the persons or organizations responsible for the functional safety activities.
4.2 Interpretations of tables
Tables are normative or informative depending on their context. The different methods listed in a table
contribute to the level of confidence in achieving compliance with the corresponding requirement. Each
method in a table is either
a) a consecutive entry (marked by a sequence number in the leftmost column, e.g. 1, 2, 3), or
b) an alternative entry (marked by a number followed by a letter in the leftmost column, e.g. 2a, 2b, 2c).
For consecutive entries, all methods shall be applied as recommended in accordance with the ASIL. If
methods other than those listed are to be applied, a rationale shall be given that these fulfil the corresponding
requirement.
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ISO 26262-2:2011(E)
For alternative entries, an appropriate combination of methods shall be applied in accordance with the ASIL
indicated, independent of whether they are listed in the table or not. If methods are listed with different
degrees of recommendation for an ASIL, the methods with the higher recommendation should be preferred. A
rationale shall be given that the selected combination of methods complies with the corresponding
requirement.
NOTE A rationale based on the methods listed in the table is sufficient. However, this does not imply a bias for or
against methods not listed in the table.
For each method, the degree of recommendation to use the corresponding method depends on the ASIL and
is categorized as follows:
 “++” indicates that the method is highly recommended for the identified ASIL;
 “+” indicates that the method is recommended for the identified ASIL;
 “o” indicates that the method has no recommendation for or against its usage for the identified ASIL.
4.3 ASIL-dependent requirements and recommendations
The requirements or recommendations of each subclause shall be complied with for ASIL A, B, C and D, if not
stated otherwise. These requirements and recommendations refer to the ASIL of the safety goal. If ASIL
decomposition has been performed at an earlier stage of development, in accordance with ISO 26262-9:2011,
Clause 5, the ASIL resulting from the decomposition shall be complied with.
If an ASIL is given in parentheses in ISO 26262, the corresponding subclause shall be considered as a
recommendation rather than a requirement for this ASIL. This has no link with the parenthesis notation related
to ASIL decomposition.
5 Overall safety management
5.1 Objective
The objective of this clause is to define the requirements for the organizations that are responsible for the
safety lifecycle, or that perform safety activities in the safety lifecycle.
This clause serves as a prerequisite to the activities in the ISO 26262 safety lifecycle.
5.2 General
5.2.1 Overview of the safety lifecycle
The ISO 26262 safety lifecycle (see Figure 2) encompasses the principal safety activities during the concept
phase, product development, production, operation, service and decommissioning. Planning, coordinating and
documenting the safety activities of all phases of the safety lifecycle are key management tasks.
Figure 2 represents the reference safety lifecycle model. Tailoring of the safety lifecycle, including iterations of
subphases, is allowed.
NOTE 1 The activities during the concept phase and the product development, and after the release for production are
described in detail in ISO 26262-3 (concept phase), ISO 26262-4 (product development at the system level), ISO 26262-5
(product development at the hardware level), ISO 26262-6 (product development at the software level) and ISO 26262-7
(production and operation).
NOTE 2 Table A.1 provides an overview of the objectives, prerequisites and work products of the particular phases of
the management of functional safety.
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ISO 26262-2:2011(E)
Management of functional safety
2-5 to 2-7
3-5 Item definition
Initiation of the
3-6
safety lifecycle
Hazard analysis
3-7
and risk assessment
Functional safety
3-8
concept
Product development:
4
system level
5 6
HW SW Allocation
Operation Production
External
7-6 7-5
level level to other Controllability
planning planning
measures
technologies
4-9 Safety validation
Functional safety
4-10
assessment
Release
4-11
for production
Production
7-5
In the case of a
modification, back to
the appropriate
Operation, service
lifecycle phase
and
7-6
decommissioning

NOTE Within the figure, the specific clauses of each part of ISO 26262 are indicated in the following manner: “m-n”,
where “m” represents the number of the part and “n” indicates the number of the clause, e.g. “3-6” represents Clause 6 of
ISO 26262-3.
Figure 2 — Safety lifecycle
5.2.2 26BExplanatory remarks on the safety lifecycle
ISO 26262 specifies requirements with regard to specific phases and subphases of the safety lifecycle, but
also includes requirements that apply to several, or all, phases of the safety lifecycle, such as the
requirements for the management of functional safety.
The key management tasks are to plan, coordinate and track the activities related to functional safety. These
management tasks apply to all phases of the safety lifecycle. The requirements for the management of
functional safety are given in this part, which distinguishes:
 overall safety management (see this clause);
 safety management during the concept phase and the product development (see Clause 6);
 safety management after the item's release for production (see Clause 7).
4 © ISO 2011 – All rights reserved

After the
release for
Product development Concept phase
production

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ISO 26262-2:2011(E)
The following descriptions explain the definitions of the different phases and subphases of the safety lifecycle,
as well as other key concepts:
a) The subphase: item definition
The initiating task of the safety lifecycle is to develop a description of the item with regard to its
functionality, interfaces, environmental conditions, legal requirements, known hazards, etc. The boundary
of the item and its interfaces, as well as assumptions concerning other items, elements, systems and
components are determined (see ISO 26262-3:2011, Clause 5).
b) The subphase: initiation of the safety lifecycle
Based on the item definition, the safety lifecycle is initiated by distinguishing between either a new
development, or a modification of an existing item.
If an existing item is modified, the results of an impact analysis are used to tailor the safety lifecycle (see
ISO 26262-3:2011, Clause 6).
c) The subphase: hazard analysis and risk assessment
After the initiation of the safety lifecycle, the hazard analysis and risk assessment is performed as given in
ISO 26262-3:2011, Clause 7. First, the hazard analysis and risk assessment estimates the probability of
exposure, the controllability and the severity of the hazardous events with regard to the item. Together,
these parameters determine the ASILs of the hazardous events. Subsequently, the hazard analysis and
risk assessment determines the safety goals for the item, with the safety goals being the top level safety
requirements for the item. The ASILs determined for the hazardous events are assigned to the
corresponding safety goals.
During the subsequent phases and subphases, detailed safety requirements are derived from the safety
goals. These safety requirements inherit the ASIL of the corresponding safety goals.
d) The subphase: functional safety concept
Based on the safety goals, a functional safety concept (see ISO 26262-3:2011, Clause 8) is specified
considering preliminary architectural assumptions. The functional safety concept is specified by functional
safety requirements that are allocated to the elements of the item. The functional safety concept can also
include other technologies or interfaces with external measures, provided that the expected behaviours
thereof can be validated (see ISO 26262-4:2011, Clause 9). The implementation of other technologies is
outside the scope of ISO 26262 and the implementation of the external measures is outside the scope of
the item development.
e) The phase: product development at the system level
After having specified the functional safety concept, the item is developed from the system level
perspective, as given in ISO 26262-4. The system development process is based on the concept of a
V-model with the specification of the technical safety requirements, the system architecture, the system
design and implementation on the left hand branch and the integration, verification, validation and the
functional safety assessment on the right hand branch.
The hardware-software interface is specified in this phase.
Figure 1 provides an overview of the subphases of the product development at the system level.
The product development at the system level incorporates validation tasks for activities occurring within
other safety lifecycle phases, including
 the validation of the aspects of the functional safety concept that are implemented by other
technologies;
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ISO 26262-2:2011(E)
 the validation of the assumptions concerning the effectiveness and the performance of external
measures; and
 the validation of the assumptions concerning human response, including controllability and
operational tasks.
The release for production is the final subphase of the product development and provides the item’s
release for series production (see ISO 26262-4:2011, Clause 11).
f) The phase: product development at the hardware level
Based on the system design specification, the item is developed from the hardware level perspective (see
ISO 26262-5). The hardware development process is based on the concept of a V-model with the
specification of the hardware requirements and the hardware design and implementation on the left hand
branch and the hardware integration and testing on the right hand branch.
Figure 1 provides an overview of the subphases of the product development at the hardware level.
g) The phase: product development at the software level
Based on the system design specification, the item is developed from the software level perspective (see
ISO 26262-6). The software development process is based on the concept of a V-model with the
specification of the software requirements and the software architectural design and implementation on
the left hand branch, and the software integration and testing, and the verification of the software
requirements on the right hand branch.
Figure 1 provides an overview of the subphases of the product development at the software level.
h) Production planning and operation planning
The planning for production and operation, and the specification of the associated requirements, starts
during the product development at the system level (see ISO 26262-4). The requirements for production
and operation are given in ISO 26262-7:2011, Clauses 5 and 6.
i) The phase: production and operation, service and decommissioning
This phase addresses the production processes relevant for the functional safety goals of the item, i.e.
the safety-related special characteristics, and the development and management of instructions for the
maintenance, repair and decommissioning of the item to ensure funct
...

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