FURPS is an acronym representing a model for classifying software quality attributes (functional and non-functional requirements):
Functionality - Capability (Size & Generality of Feature Set), Reusability (Compatibility, Interoperability, Portability), Security (Safety & Exploitability)Usability (UX) - Human Factors, Aesthetics, Consistency, Documentation, ResponsivenessReliability - Availability (Failure Frequency (Robustness/Durability/Resilience), Failure Extent & Time-Length (Recoverability/Survivability)), Predictability (Stability), Accuracy (Frequency/Severity of Error)Performance - Speed, Efficiency, Resource Consumption (power, ram, cache, etc.), Throughput, Capacity, ScalabilitySupportability (Serviceability, Maintainability, Sustainability, Repair Speed) - Testability, Flexibility (Modifiability, Configurability, Adaptability, Extensibility, Modularity), Installability, LocalizabilityThe model, developed at Hewlett-Packard was first publicly elaborated by Grady and Caswell. FURPS+ is now widely used in the software industry. The + was later added to the model after various campaigns at HP to extend the acronym to emphasize various attributes.