SEJun 17, 2020

An Automatically Created Novel Bug Dataset and its Validation in Bug Prediction

arXiv:2006.10158v154 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This provides a new dataset for software engineers to improve bug prediction tools, though it is incremental in dataset creation.

The authors tackled the problem of bug prediction in software development by creating a novel bug dataset that captures buggy and fixed states of code elements from narrow timeframes, and they achieved F-measure values over 0.74 in bug prediction models.

Bugs are inescapable during software development due to frequent code changes, tight deadlines, etc.; therefore, it is important to have tools to find these errors. One way of performing bug identification is to analyze the characteristics of buggy source code elements from the past and predict the present ones based on the same characteristics, using e.g. machine learning models. To support model building tasks, code elements and their characteristics are collected in so-called bug datasets which serve as the input for learning. We present the \emph{BugHunter Dataset}: a novel kind of automatically constructed and freely available bug dataset containing code elements (files, classes, methods) with a wide set of code metrics and bug information. Other available bug datasets follow the traditional approach of gathering the characteristics of all source code elements (buggy and non-buggy) at only one or more pre-selected release versions of the code. Our approach, on the other hand, captures the buggy and the fixed states of the same source code elements from the narrowest timeframe we can identify for a bug's presence, regardless of release versions. To show the usefulness of the new dataset, we built and evaluated bug prediction models and achieved F-measure values over 0.74.

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