Luc Lesoil

2papers

2 Papers

2.4SEApr 17
Small Yet Configurable: Unveiling Null Variability in Software

Xhevahire Tërnava, Georges Aaron Randrianaina, Luc Lesoil et al.

Many small-scale software systems, that is, with limited codebase or binary size, are widely used in everyday tasks, yet their configurability remains largely unexplored. At the same time, studies on modern software systems show a trend toward increasing configurability, alongside growing interest in building immutable, specialized, and reproducible software. In this paper, we present the first empirical study on the extent of configurability in small-scale software systems. By analyzing 108 programs from GNU coreutils, we show that even small programs can exhibit significant compile-time and run-time variability, with up to 76 options per program. Then, there is a high correlation (0.78) between run-time variability and codebase size. Furthermore, an analysis of the 20 smallest programs across 85 releases reveals that variability tends to increase over time, primarily due to the added compile-time variability. This suggests that shifting options between run-time and compile-time, removing unnecessary run-time variability, or resolving compile-time variability early, can help reduce codebase complexity and size. We also introduce, for the first time, the concept of null-variable software system, one with no configurability beyond mandatory features. Our findings show that high configurability is not exclusive to large-scale systems and that reducing unnecessary variability can lead to lightweight, smaller, and more maintainable software. We hope this effort contributes to designing new software by understanding how to balance its configurability with codebase size.

SEDec 14, 2021
The Interaction between Inputs and Configurations fed to Software Systems: an Empirical Study

Luc Lesoil, Mathieu Acher, Arnaud Blouin et al.

Widely used software systems such as video encoders are by necessity highly configurable, with hundreds or even thousands of options to choose from. Their users often have a hard time finding suitable values for these options (i.e. finding a proper configuration of the software system) to meet their goals for the tasks at hand, e.g. compress a video down to a certain size. One dimension of the problem is of course that performance depends on the input data: a video as input to an encoder like x264 or a file system fed to a tool like xz. To achieve good performance, users should therefore take into account both dimensions of (1) software variability and (2) input data. In this problem-statement paper, we conduct a large study over 8 configurable systems that quantifies the existing interactions between input data and configurations of software systems. The results exhibit that (1) inputs fed to software systems interact with their configuration options in non monotonous ways, significantly impacting their performance properties (2) tuning a software system for its input data makes it possible to multiply its performance by up to ten (3) input variability can jeopardize the relevance of performance predictive models for a field deployment.