On the feasibility of automated prediction of bug and non-bug issues

2020 | journal article. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

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​On the feasibility of automated prediction of bug and non-bug issues​
Herbold, S. ; Trautsch, A.   & Trautsch, F. ​ (2020) 
Empirical Software Engineering25(6) pp. 5333​-5369​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10664-020-09885-w 

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Authors
Herbold, Steffen ; Trautsch, Alexander ; Trautsch, Fabian 
Abstract
Abstract Context Issue tracking systems are used to track and describe tasks in the development process, e.g., requested feature improvements or reported bugs. However, past research has shown that the reported issue types often do not match the description of the issue. Objective We want to understand the overall maturity of the state of the art of issue type prediction with the goal to predict if issues are bugs and evaluate if we can improve existing models by incorporating manually specified knowledge about issues. Method We train different models for the title and description of the issue to account for the difference in structure between these fields, e.g., the length. Moreover, we manually detect issues whose description contains a null pointer exception, as these are strong indicators that issues are bugs. Results Our approach performs best overall, but not significantly different from an approach from the literature based on the fastText classifier from Facebook AI Research. The small improvements in prediction performance are due to structural information about the issues we used. We found that using information about the content of issues in form of null pointer exceptions is not useful. We demonstrate the usefulness of issue type prediction through the example of labelling bugfixing commits. Conclusions Issue type prediction can be a useful tool if the use case allows either for a certain amount of missed bug reports or the prediction of too many issues as bug is acceptable.
Issue Date
2020
Journal
Empirical Software Engineering 
ISSN
1382-3256
eISSN
1573-7616
Language
English
Sponsor
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft https://doi.org/10.13039/501100001659

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