Specification Inference for Evolving Systems

arxiv(2023)

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摘要
In this paper, we propose an assertion-based approach to capture software evolution, through the notion of commit-relevant specification. A commit-relevant specification summarises the program properties that have changed as a consequence of a commit (understood as a specific software modification), via two sets of assertions, the delta-added assertions, properties that did not hold in the pre-commit version but hold on the post-commit, and the delta-removed assertions, those that were valid in the pre-commit, but no longer hold after the code change. We also present DeltaSpec, an approach that combines test generation and dynamic specification inference to automatically compute commit-relevant specifications from given commits. We evaluate DeltaSpec on two datasets that include a total of 57 commits (63 classes and 797 methods). We show that commit-relevant assertions can precisely describe the semantic deltas of code changes, providing a useful mechanism for validating the behavioural evolution of software. We also show that DeltaSpec can infer 88% of the manually written commit-relevant assertions expressible in the language supported by the tool. Moreover, our experiments demonstrate that DeltaSpec's inferred assertions are effective to detect regression faults. More precisely, we show that commit-relevant assertions can detect, on average, 78.3% of the artificially seeded faults that interact with the code changes. We also show that assertions in the delta are 58.3% more effective in detecting commit-relevant mutants than assertions outside the delta, and that it takes on average 169% fewer assertions when these are commit-relevant, compared to using general valid assertions, to achieve a same commit-relevant mutation score.
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关键词
evolving systems,inference
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