Reuse and maintenance practices among divergent forks in three software ecosystems
Artikel i vetenskaplig tidskrift, 2022

With the rise of social coding platforms that rely on distributed version control systems, software reuse is also on the rise. Many software developers leverage this reuse by creating variants through forking, to account for different customer needs, markets, or environments. Forked variants then form a so-called software family; they share a common code base and are maintained in parallel by same or different developers. As such, software families can easily arise within software ecosystems, which are large collections of interdependent software components maintained by communities of collaborating contributors. However, little is known about the existence and characteristics of such families within ecosystems, especially about their maintenance practices. Improving our empirical understanding of such families will help build better tools for maintaining and evolving such families. We empirically explore maintenance practices in such fork-based software families within ecosystems of open-source software. Our focus is on three of the largest software ecosystems existence today: Android,.NET, and JavaScript. We identify and analyze software families that are maintained together and that exist both on the official distribution platform (Google play, nuget, and npm) as well as on GitHub , allowing us to analyze reuse practices in depth. We mine and identify 38 software families, 526 software families, and 8,837 software families from the ecosystems of Android,.NET, and JavaScript, to study their characteristics and code-propagation practices. We provide scripts for analyzing code integration within our families. Interestingly, our results show that there is little code integration across the studied software families from the three ecosystems. Our studied families also show that techniques of direct integration using git outside of GitHub is more commonly used than GitHub pull requests. Overall, we hope to raise awareness about the existence of software families within larger ecosystems of software, calling for further research and better tools support to effectively maintain and evolve them.

Clone-and-own

Change propagation

Empirical study

Squashing changes

Variant developers

Rebasing changes

Variants

Pull requests

Version control systems

Variant synchronisation

Software product lines

Cherry-picking changes

Författare

John Businge

Universiteit Antwerpen

Mbarara University of Science & Technology

Moses Openja

École Polytechnique de Montréal

Sarah Nadi

University of Alberta

Thorsten Berger

Ruhr-Universität Bochum

Göteborgs universitet

Empirical Software Engineering

1382-3256 (ISSN) 1573-7616 (eISSN)

Vol. 27 2 54

Ämneskategorier

Mänsklig interaktion med IKT

Programvaruteknik

Systemvetenskap, informationssystem och informatik med samhällsvetenskaplig inriktning

DOI

10.1007/s10664-021-10078-2

Mer information

Senast uppdaterat

2023-01-17