CM-3 - Configuration Change Control

a. Determine and document the types of changes to the system that are configuration-controlled; b. Review proposed configuration-controlled changes to the system and approve or disapprove such changes with explicit consideration for security and privacy impact analyses; c. Document configuration change decisions associated with the system; d. Implement approved configuration-controlled changes to the system; e. Retain records of configuration-controlled changes to the system for [Assignment: organization-defined time period]; f. Monitor and review activities associated with configuration-controlled changes to the system; and g. Coordinate and provide oversight for configuration change control activities through [Assignment: organization-defined configuration change control element] that convenes [Selection (one or more): [Assignment: organization-defined frequency] ; when [Assignment: organization-defined configuration change conditions] ].


ID: CM-3
Enhancements:  1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8

Space Segment Guidance

Managing configuration changes on a spacecraft is delicate due to the limited ability to revert once on orbit.  Each planned alteration, such as updating flight software or tweaking payload settings, must undergo stringent review, often using a configuration control board that validates the impact on mission success, reliability, and security.  This approach ensures that the spacecraft is never subjected to untested code that might jeopardize critical operations.  If anomalies emerge after a patch, the change logs provide a forensic trail, allowing operators to pinpoint the root cause quickly and, if necessary, revert to a known-stable configuration, assuming enough memory is allocated for a backup image.