Title :
A conservative theory for long-term reliability-growth prediction [of software]
Author :
Bishop, Peter ; Bloomfield, Robin
Author_Institution :
Adelard, London, UK
fDate :
12/1/1996 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
This paper describes a different approach to software reliability growth modeling which enables long-term predictions. Using relatively common assumptions, it is shown that the average value of the failure rate of the program, after a particular use-time, t, is bounded by N/(e·t), where N is the initial number of faults. This is conservative since it places a worst-case bound on the reliability rather than making a best estimate. The predictions might be relatively insensitive to assumption violations over the longer term. The theory offers the potential for making long-term software reliability growth predictions based solely on prior estimates of the number of residual faults. The predicted bound appears to agree with a wide range of industrial and experimental reliability data. Less pessimistic results can be obtained if additional assumptions are made about the failure rate distribution of faults
Keywords :
failure analysis; reliability theory; software reliability; failure rate distribution; initial fault number; long-term reliability-growth prediction; program failure rate; residual fault number; software reliability growth modeling; use-time; worst-case bound; Partial response channels; Predictive models; Production; Reliability theory; Software quality; Software reliability;
Journal_Title :
Reliability, IEEE Transactions on