DocumentCode
1958536
Title
An Empirical Analysis of Bug Reports and Bug Fixing in Open Source Android Apps
Author
Bhattacharya, Pallab ; Ulanova, L. ; Neamtiu, Iulian ; Koduru, S.C.
Author_Institution
Dept. of Comput. Sci. & Eng., Univ. of California, Riverside, Riverside, CA, USA
fYear
2013
fDate
5-8 March 2013
Firstpage
133
Lastpage
143
Abstract
Smartphone platforms and applications (apps) have gained tremendous popularity recently. Due to the novelty of the smartphone platform and tools, and the low barrier to entry for app distribution, apps are prone to errors, which affects user experience and requires frequent bug fixes. An essential step towards correcting this situation is understanding the nature of the bugs and bug-fixing processes associated with smartphone platforms and apps. However, prior empirical bug studies have focused mostly on desktop and server applications. Therefore, in this paper, we perform an in-depth empirical study on bugs in the Google Android smartphone platform and 24 widely-used open-source Android apps from diverse categories such as communication, tools, and media. Our analysis has three main thrusts. First, we define several metrics to understand the quality of bug reports and analyze the bug-fix process, including developer involvement. Second, we show how differences in bug life-cycles can affect the bug-fix process. Third, as Android devices carry significant amounts of security-sensitive information, we perform a study of Android security bugs. We found that, although contributor activity in these projects is generally high, developer involvement decreases in some projects, similarly, while bug-report quality is high, bug triaging is still a problem. Finally, we observe that in Android apps, security bug reports are of higher quality but get fixed slower than non-security bugs. We believe that the findings of our study could potentially benefit both developers and users of Android apps.
Keywords
mobile computing; operating systems (computers); program debugging; security of data; smart phones; Android security bugs; Google Android smartphone; app distribution; bug fixing process; bug life-cycle; bug report; developer involvement; open source Android apps; smart phone application; smart phone platform; Androids; Computer bugs; Google; Humanoid robots; Mobile communication; Security; Smart phones; Google Android; bug fixing; bug reports; empirical studies; security bugs; smartphone apps;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Software Maintenance and Reengineering (CSMR), 2013 17th European Conference on
Conference_Location
Genova
ISSN
1534-5351
Print_ISBN
978-1-4673-5833-0
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/CSMR.2013.23
Filename
6498462
Link To Document