7,349 research outputs found
Structured Review of the Evidence for Effects of Code Duplication on Software Quality
This report presents the detailed steps and results of a structured review of code clone literature. The aim of the review is to investigate the evidence for the claim that code duplication has a negative effect on code changeability. This report contains only the details of the review for which there is not enough place to include them in the companion paper published at a conference (Hordijk, Ponisio et al. 2009 - Harmfulness of Code Duplication - A Structured Review of the Evidence)
C to O-O Translation: Beyond the Easy Stuff
Can we reuse some of the huge code-base developed in C to take advantage of
modern programming language features such as type safety, object-orientation,
and contracts? This paper presents a source-to-source translation of C code
into Eiffel, a modern object-oriented programming language, and the supporting
tool C2Eif. The translation is completely automatic and supports the entire C
language (ANSI, as well as many GNU C Compiler extensions, through CIL) as used
in practice, including its usage of native system libraries and inlined
assembly code. Our experiments show that C2Eif can handle C applications and
libraries of significant size (such as vim and libgsl), as well as challenging
benchmarks such as the GCC torture tests. The produced Eiffel code is
functionally equivalent to the original C code, and takes advantage of some of
Eiffel's object-oriented features to produce safe and easy-to-debug
translations
Analysis of Software Binaries for Reengineering-Driven Product Line Architecture\^aAn Industrial Case Study
This paper describes a method for the recovering of software architectures
from a set of similar (but unrelated) software products in binary form. One
intention is to drive refactoring into software product lines and combine
architecture recovery with run time binary analysis and existing clustering
methods. Using our runtime binary analysis, we create graphs that capture the
dependencies between different software parts. These are clustered into smaller
component graphs, that group software parts with high interactions into larger
entities. The component graphs serve as a basis for further software product
line work. In this paper, we concentrate on the analysis part of the method and
the graph clustering. We apply the graph clustering method to a real
application in the context of automation / robot configuration software tools.Comment: In Proceedings FMSPLE 2015, arXiv:1504.0301
FixMiner: Mining Relevant Fix Patterns for Automated Program Repair
Patching is a common activity in software development. It is generally
performed on a source code base to address bugs or add new functionalities. In
this context, given the recurrence of bugs across projects, the associated
similar patches can be leveraged to extract generic fix actions. While the
literature includes various approaches leveraging similarity among patches to
guide program repair, these approaches often do not yield fix patterns that are
tractable and reusable as actionable input to APR systems. In this paper, we
propose a systematic and automated approach to mining relevant and actionable
fix patterns based on an iterative clustering strategy applied to atomic
changes within patches. The goal of FixMiner is thus to infer separate and
reusable fix patterns that can be leveraged in other patch generation systems.
Our technique, FixMiner, leverages Rich Edit Script which is a specialized tree
structure of the edit scripts that captures the AST-level context of the code
changes. FixMiner uses different tree representations of Rich Edit Scripts for
each round of clustering to identify similar changes. These are abstract syntax
trees, edit actions trees, and code context trees. We have evaluated FixMiner
on thousands of software patches collected from open source projects.
Preliminary results show that we are able to mine accurate patterns,
efficiently exploiting change information in Rich Edit Scripts. We further
integrated the mined patterns to an automated program repair prototype,
PARFixMiner, with which we are able to correctly fix 26 bugs of the Defects4J
benchmark. Beyond this quantitative performance, we show that the mined fix
patterns are sufficiently relevant to produce patches with a high probability
of correctness: 81% of PARFixMiner's generated plausible patches are correct.Comment: 31 pages, 11 figure
Structured Review of Code Clone Literature
This report presents the results of a structured review of code clone literature. The aim of the review is to assemble a conceptual model of clone-related concepts which helps us to reason about clones. This conceptual model unifies clone concepts from a wide range of literature, so that findings about clones can be compared with each other
Search based software engineering: Trends, techniques and applications
© ACM, 2012. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of ACM for your personal use. Not for redistribution. The definitive version is available from the link below.In the past five years there has been a dramatic increase in work on Search-Based Software Engineering (SBSE), an approach to Software Engineering (SE) in which Search-Based Optimization (SBO) algorithms are used to address problems in SE. SBSE has been applied to problems throughout the SE lifecycle, from requirements and project planning to maintenance and reengineering. The approach is attractive because it offers a suite of adaptive automated and semiautomated solutions in situations typified by large complex problem spaces with multiple competing and conflicting objectives.
This article provides a review and classification of literature on SBSE. The work identifies research trends and relationships between the techniques applied and the applications to which they have been applied and highlights gaps in the literature and avenues for further research.EPSRC and E
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