Title :
Assessing the effect of requirements traceability for software maintenance
Author :
Mader, Patrick ; Egyed, Alexander
Author_Institution :
Inst. for Syst. Eng. & Autom. (SEA), Johannes Kepler Univ., Linz, Austria
Abstract :
Advocates of requirements traceability regularly cite advantages like easier program comprehension and support for software maintenance (i.e., software change). However, despite its growing popularity, there exists no published evaluation about the usefulness of requirements traceability. It is important, if not crucial, to investigate whether the use of requirements traceability can significantly support development tasks to eventually justify its costs. We thus conducted a controlled experiment with 52 subjects performing real maintenance tasks on two third-party development projects: half of the tasks with and the other half without traceability. Our findings show that subjects with traceability performed on average 21% faster on a task and created on average 60% more correct solutions - suggesting that traceability not only saves downstream cost but can profoundly improve software maintenance quality. Furthermore, we aimed for an initial cost-benefit estimation and set the measured time reductions by using traceability in relation to the initial costs for setting-up traceability in the evaluated systems.
Keywords :
costing; software maintenance; software quality; downstream cost; initial cost benefit estimation; program comprehension; requirement traceability; software maintenance quality; third-party development projects; Analysis of variance; Conferences; Java; Maintenance engineering; Materials; Software maintenance; empirical software engineering; experiment; requirements traceability; software maintenance; traceability effect;
Conference_Titel :
Software Maintenance (ICSM), 2012 28th IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Trento
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4673-2313-0
DOI :
10.1109/ICSM.2012.6405269