Towards a Catalog of Composite Refactorings
This work addresses the need for standardized composite refactoring documentation for software developers, but it is incremental as it builds upon existing single refactoring catalogs.
The authors tackled the lack of documented composite refactoring operations in software maintenance by proposing and documenting a catalog of eight composite refactorings, and they mined these composites from a refactoring oracle and ten open-source projects to characterize their size and location.
Catalogs of refactoring have key importance in software maintenance and evolution, since developers rely on such documents to understand and perform refactoring operations. Furthermore, these catalogs constitute a reference guide for communication between practitioners since they standardize a common refactoring vocabulary. Fowler's book describes the most popular catalog of refactorings, which documents single and well-known refactoring operations. However, sometimes refactorings are composite transformations, i.e., a sequence of refactorings is performed over a given program element. For example, a sequence of Extract Method operations (a single refactoring) can be performed over the same method, in one or in multiple commits, to simplify its implementation, therefore, leading to a Method Decomposition operation (a composite refactoring). In this paper, we propose and document a catalog with eight composite refactorings. We also implement a set of scripts to mine composite refactorings by preprocessing the results of refactoring detection tools. Using such scripts, we search for composites in a representative refactoring oracle with hundreds of confirmed single refactoring operations. Next, to complement this first study, we also search for composites in the full history of ten well-known open-source projects. We characterize the detected composite refactorings, under dimensions such as size and location. We conclude by addressing the applications and implications of the proposed catalog.