An Empirical Study of Usages, Updates and Risks of Third-Party Libraries in Java Projects
This study addresses the risk of outdated libraries for Java developers, but it is incremental as it applies existing analysis methods to new data in this domain.
This paper tackles the problem of outdated third-party libraries in Java projects by conducting a quantitative study on usage, updates, and risks across 806 open-source projects, finding that outdated libraries are common and pose risks, and proposes a bug-driven alerting system to assist developers.
Third-party libraries are a central building block to develop software systems. However, outdated third-party libraries are commonly used, and developers are usually less aware of the potential risks. Therefore, a quantitative and holistic study on usages, updates and risks of third-party libraries can provide practical insights to improve the ecosystem sustainably. In this paper, we conduct such a study in the Java ecosystem. Specifically, we conduct a library usage analysis (e.g., usage intensity and outdatedness) and a library update analysis (e.g., update intensity and delay) using 806 open-source projects. The two analyses aim to quantify usage and update practices holistically from the perspective of both open-source projects and third-party libraries. Then, we conduct a library risk analysis (e.g., potential risk and developer response) in terms of bugs with 15 popularly-used third-party libraries. This analysis aims to quantify the potential risk of using outdated libraries and the developer response to the risk. Our findings from the three analyses provide practical insights to developers and researchers on problems and potential solutions in maintaining third-party libraries (e.g., smart alerting and automated updating of outdated libraries). To demonstrate the usefulness of our findings, we propose a bug-driven alerting system for assisting developers to make confident decisions in updating third-party library versions. We have released our dataset to foster valuable applications and improve the ecosystem.