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Derakhshanfar, P. (author), Devroey, Xavier (author), Panichella, A. (author), Zaidman, A.E. (author), van Deursen, A. (author)
Search-based approaches have been used in the literature to automate the process of creating unit test cases. However, related work has shown that generated tests with high code coverage could be ineffective, i.e., they may not detect all faults or kill all injected mutants. In this paper, we propose Cling, an integration-level test case...
journal article 2023
document
Olsthoorn, Mitchell (author), van Deursen, A. (author), Panichella, A. (author)
Transaction-reverting statements are key constructs within Solidity that are extensively used for authority and validity checks. Current state-of-the-art search-based testing and fuzzing approaches do not explicitly handle these statements and therefore can not effectively detect security vulnerabilities. In this paper, we argue that it is...
conference paper 2022
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Schröder, C.J. (author), van der Feltz, Adriaan (author), Panichella, A. (author), Aniche, Maurício (author)
Deciding what constitutes a single module, what classes belong to which module or the right set of modules for a specific software system has always been a challenging task. The problem is even harder in large-scale software systems composed of thousands of classes and hundreds of modules. Over the years, researchers have been proposing...
conference paper 2021
document
Castelein, J. (author), Aniche, Maurício (author), Soltani, M. (author), Panichella, A. (author), van Deursen, A. (author)
Database-centric systems strongly rely on SQL queries to manage and manipulate their data. These SQL commands can range from very simple selections to queries that involve several tables, subqueries, and grouping operations. And, as with any important piece of code, developers should properly test SQL queries. In order to completely test a SQL...
conference paper 2018
document
Romano, D. (author), Raemaekers, S. (author), Pinzger, M. (author)
Recent studies have shown that the violation of the Interface Segregation Principle (ISP) is critical for maintaining and evolving software systems. Fat interfaces (i.e., interfaces violating the ISP) change more frequently and degrade the quality of the components coupled to them. According to the ISP the interfaces’ design should force no...
report 2014
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