State-of-practice in GUI-based system and acceptance testing: An industrial multiple-case study
Paper i proceeding, 2013

Software testing is an essential means of evaluating software quality. System and acceptance tests aim to validate a system's conformance to its requirements on a high level of system abstraction. Therefore, they are generally performed by executing end-user scenarios through the system's graphical user interface (GUI). However, to the authors' best knowledge, there are no empirical studies that evaluate how GUI-based system and acceptance testing is performed in industrial practice. In this paper, we present a multiple-case study with the goal to investigate the state-of-practice of GUI-based system and acceptance testing at six software development companies of varying context. The main findings are that manual, GUI-based system testing is widespread and that automated GUI-based system and acceptance testing exists only on a small scale. Additionally, the study identifies core problems with GUI-based system and acceptance testing such as test tool limitations, high test costs and customer involvement in testing.

Acceptance Testing

GUI-based Testing

System Testing

Empirical Study

Case Study

Quality assurance

Process improvement

Software Testing

Författare

Grischa Liebel

Chalmers, Data- och informationsteknik, Software Engineering

Emil Alégroth

Chalmers, Data- och informationsteknik, Software Engineering

Robert Feldt

Chalmers, Data- och informationsteknik, Software Engineering

Proceedings - 39th Euromicro Conference Series on Software Engineering and Advanced Applications, SEAA 2013. Santander; Spain; 4 September 2013 through 6 September 2013

17-24
978-076955091-6 (ISBN)

Ämneskategorier

Data- och informationsvetenskap

DOI

10.1109/SEAA.2013.29

ISBN

978-076955091-6

Mer information

Skapat

2017-10-07