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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Reference Coupling: A Method for Identifying Software Ecosystems of Technically Dependent Projects

Harrison, Francis 22 December 2015 (has links)
Software projects are not developed in isolation. Open source software projects encourage a networked collaboration and interdependence across projects and developers. Recent research has shifted to studying software ecosystems, communities of projects that depend on each other and are developed together. However, identifying technical dependencies at the ecosystem level can be challenging. In this dissertation, we propose a new method, known as reference coupling, for detecting technical dependencies between projects. The method establishes dependencies through user-specified cross-references between projects. We use our method to identify ecosystems in GitHub hosted projects, and we identify several characteristics of the identified ecosystems. Our findings show that most ecosystems are centered around one project and are interconnected with other ecosystems. The predominant type of ecosystems are those that develop tools to support software development. We also found that the project owners’ social behavior aligns well with the technical dependencies within the ecosystem, but project contributors’ social behavior does not align with these dependencies. We conclude with a discussion on future research that is enabled by our reference coupling method. / Graduate / harrison.franc@gmail.com
2

Identificação e visualização de dependências em sistemas de software orientados a objetos / Identification and Visualization of Dependencies in Object-Oriented Software Systems

Oliva, Gustavo Ansaldi 22 September 2011 (has links)
Degradação do design é um problema central investigado na área de evolução de software. A densa rede de interdependências que emerge entre classes e módulos ao longo do tempo resulta em código difícil de mudar, não reutilizável e que não comunica por si só sua intenção. Dentre outros motivos, designs degradam porque requisitos mudam de maneiras não antecipadas pelo design inicial, ou seja, as modificações no código introduzem dependências novas e não planejadas entre classes e módulos do sistema. A gerência de dependências visa reduzir a degradação do design por meio de uma série de mecanismos que auxiliam na administração da complexidade estrutural inerente de sistemas orientados a objetos. Neste trabalho, investigamos as técnicas de identificação de dependências estruturais e lógicas. Em particular, por meio de um estudo de larga escala, comparamos os conjuntos desses dois tipos de dependências. Em seguida, conduzimos um estudo de caso a fim de identificar as origens de dependências lógicas. Por fim, fazemos um levantamento das técnicas de visualização de dependências e mostramos a ferramenta XFlow. / Design degradation is a central problem investigated in the area of software evolution. The dense web of interdependencies that emerges among classes and modules over time results in code that is hard to change, not reusable and that does not communicate its intention. Among other reasons, designs degrade because requirements changes in ways that were not anticipated by the initial design, i.e. the changes in code introduce new and unplanned dependencies among classes and modules of the system. Dependency management aims to reduce design degradation by means of a series of mechanisms that helps in the management of the inherent structural complexity of object oriented systems. In this work, we investigate structural and logical dependencies identification techniques. In particular, by means of a large scale study, we compare the sets of these two kinds of dependencies. Afterwards, we conduct a case study in order to uncover the origins of logical dependencies. Finally, we survey dependency visualization techniques and present the XFlow tool.
3

Identificação e visualização de dependências em sistemas de software orientados a objetos / Identification and Visualization of Dependencies in Object-Oriented Software Systems

Gustavo Ansaldi Oliva 22 September 2011 (has links)
Degradação do design é um problema central investigado na área de evolução de software. A densa rede de interdependências que emerge entre classes e módulos ao longo do tempo resulta em código difícil de mudar, não reutilizável e que não comunica por si só sua intenção. Dentre outros motivos, designs degradam porque requisitos mudam de maneiras não antecipadas pelo design inicial, ou seja, as modificações no código introduzem dependências novas e não planejadas entre classes e módulos do sistema. A gerência de dependências visa reduzir a degradação do design por meio de uma série de mecanismos que auxiliam na administração da complexidade estrutural inerente de sistemas orientados a objetos. Neste trabalho, investigamos as técnicas de identificação de dependências estruturais e lógicas. Em particular, por meio de um estudo de larga escala, comparamos os conjuntos desses dois tipos de dependências. Em seguida, conduzimos um estudo de caso a fim de identificar as origens de dependências lógicas. Por fim, fazemos um levantamento das técnicas de visualização de dependências e mostramos a ferramenta XFlow. / Design degradation is a central problem investigated in the area of software evolution. The dense web of interdependencies that emerges among classes and modules over time results in code that is hard to change, not reusable and that does not communicate its intention. Among other reasons, designs degrade because requirements changes in ways that were not anticipated by the initial design, i.e. the changes in code introduce new and unplanned dependencies among classes and modules of the system. Dependency management aims to reduce design degradation by means of a series of mechanisms that helps in the management of the inherent structural complexity of object oriented systems. In this work, we investigate structural and logical dependencies identification techniques. In particular, by means of a large scale study, we compare the sets of these two kinds of dependencies. Afterwards, we conduct a case study in order to uncover the origins of logical dependencies. Finally, we survey dependency visualization techniques and present the XFlow tool.

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