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[Untitled]

Authors :
Gillian Z. Heller
Jeff Offutt
Stephen R. Schach
Liguo Yu
Bo Jin
Source :
Empirical Software Engineering. 8:351-365
Publication Year :
2003
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2003.

Abstract

In 1978, Lientz, Swanson, and Tompkins published the results of a survey on software maintenance. They found that 17.4% of maintenance effort was categorized as corrective in nature, 18.2% as adaptive, 60.3% as perfective, and 4.1% was categorized as other. We refer to this as the “LST” result. We contrast this survey-based result with our empirical results from the analysis of data for the repeated maintenance of three software products: a commercial real-time product, the Linux kernel, and GCC. For all three products and at both levels of granularity we considered, our observed distributions of maintenance categories were statistically very highly significantly different from LST. In particular, corrective maintenance was always more than twice the LST value. For the summed data, the percentage of corrective maintenance was more than three times the LST value. We suggest various explanations for the observed differences, including inaccuracies on the part of the maintenance managers who responded to the LST survey.

Details

ISSN :
13823256
Volume :
8
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Empirical Software Engineering
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........70ec7245b1494989e2e141b974b041e6