Prioritizing Requirements-Based Regression Test Cases: A Goal-Driven Practice

Any changes for maintenance or evolution purposes may break existing working features, or may violate the requirements established in the previous software releases. Regression testing is essential to avoid these problems, but it may be ended up with executing many time-consuming test cases. This pa...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in2011 15th European Conference on Software Maintenance and Reengineering pp. 329 - 332
Main Authors Salehie, M, Sen Li, Tahvildari, L, Dara, R, Shimin Li, Moore, M
Format Conference Proceeding
LanguageEnglish
Published IEEE 01.03.2011
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ISBN9781612842592
1612842593
ISSN1534-5351
DOI10.1109/CSMR.2011.46

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Summary:Any changes for maintenance or evolution purposes may break existing working features, or may violate the requirements established in the previous software releases. Regression testing is essential to avoid these problems, but it may be ended up with executing many time-consuming test cases. This paper tries to address prioritizing requirements-based regression test cases. To this end, system-level testing is focused on two practical issues in industrial environments: i) addressing multiple goals regarding quality, cost and effort in a project, and ii) using non-code metrics due to the lack of detailed code metrics in some situations. This paper reports a goal-driven practice at Research In Motion (RIM) towards prioritizing requirements-based test cases regarding these issues. Goal-Question-Metric (GQM) is adopted in identifying metrics for prioritization. Two sample goals are discussed to demonstrate the approach: detecting bugs earlier and maintaining testing effort. We use two releases of a prototype Web-based email client to conduct a set of experiments based on the two mentioned goals. Finally, we discuss lessons learned from applying the goal-driven approach and experiments, and we propose few directions for future research.
ISBN:9781612842592
1612842593
ISSN:1534-5351
DOI:10.1109/CSMR.2011.46