SENov 9, 2018Code
Influence of Technical and Social Factors for Introducing BugsFilipe Falcão, Caio Barbosa, Baldoino Fonseca et al.
[This paper has been withdrawn by the author due to updated research available on arXiv (arXiv:1811.01918)] As the modern open-source paradigm makes it easier to contribute to software projects, the number of developers involved in these projects keep increasing. This growth in the amount of developers makes it more difficult to deal with harmful contributions. Recent researches have found that technical and social factors can predict the success of contributions to open-source projects on GitHub. However, these researches do not study the relation between these factors with the introduction of bugs. Our study aims at investigating the influence of technical (such as, developers' experience) and social (such as, number of followers) factors on the introduction of bugs, using information from 14 projects hosted on GitHub. Understanding the influence of these factors may be useful to developers, code reviewers and researchers. For instance, code reviewers may want to double check commits from developers that present bug-related factors. We found that technical factors have a consistent influence in the introduction of bugs. On the other hand, social factors present signs of influence in bug introduction that would require more data to be properly evaluated. Moreover, we found that perils present in the mining of GitHub may impact the factors results.
SENov 5, 2018
On Relating Technical, Social Factors, and the Introduction of BugsFilipe Falcão, Caio Barbosa, Baldoino Fonseca et al.
As collaborative coding environments make it easier to contribute to software projects, the number of developers involved in these projects keeps increasing. This increase makes it more difficult for code reviewers to deal with buggy contributions. Collaborative environments like GitHub provide a rich source of data on developers' contributions. Such data can be used to extract information about developers regarding technical (e.g., their experience) and social (e.g., their interactions) factors. Recent studies analyzed the influence of these factors on different activities of software development. However, there is still room for improvement on the relation between these factors and the introduction of bugs. We present a broader study, including 8 projects from different domains and 6,537 bug reports, on relating five technical, three social factors, and the introduction of bugs. The results indicate that technical and social factors can discriminate between buggy and clean commits. But, the technical factors are more determining than social ones. Particularly, the developers' habits of not following technical contribution norms and the developer's commit bugginess are associated with an increase on commit bugginess. On the other hand, project's establishment, ownership level of developers' commit, and social influence are related to a lower chance of introducing bugs.