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izvor podataka: crosbi

A quantitative analysis of the unit verification perspective on fault distributions in complex software systems : an operational replication (CROSBI ID 217283)

Prilog u časopisu | izvorni znanstveni rad | međunarodna recenzija

Galinac Grbac, Tihana ; Runeson, Per ; Huljenić, Darko A quantitative analysis of the unit verification perspective on fault distributions in complex software systems : an operational replication // Software quality journal, 24 (2016), 4; 967-995. doi: 10.1007/s11219-015-9273-7

Podaci o odgovornosti

Galinac Grbac, Tihana ; Runeson, Per ; Huljenić, Darko

engleski

A quantitative analysis of the unit verification perspective on fault distributions in complex software systems : an operational replication

Unit verification, including software inspections and unit tests, is usually the first code verification phase in the software development process. However, principles of unit verification are weakly explored, mostly due to the lack of data, since unit verification data are rarely systematically collected and only a few studies have been published with such data from industry. Therefore, we explore the theory of fault distributions, originating in the quantitative analysis by Fenton and Ohlsson, in the weakly explored context of unit verification in large scalelarge-scale software development. We conduct a quantitative case study on a sequence of four development projects on consecutive releases of the same complex software product line system for telecommunication exchanges. We replicate the operationalization from earlier studies, analyzed hypotheses related to the Pareto principle of fault distribution, persistence of faults, effects of module size, and quality in terms of fault densities, however, now from the perspective of unit verification. The patterns in unit verification results resemble those of later verification phases, e.g.e.g., regarding the Pareto principle, and may thus be used for prediction and planning purposes. Conclusions. Using unit verification results as predictors may improve the quality and efficiency of software verification.

Software fault distributions ; unit verification ; software metrics ; empirical research ; replication

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Podaci o izdanju

24 (4)

2016.

967-995

objavljeno

0963-9314

10.1007/s11219-015-9273-7

Povezanost rada

Računarstvo

Poveznice
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