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Heuristic generation of software test data

Incorrect system operation can, at worst, be life threatening or financially devastating. Software testing is a destructive process that aims to reveal software faults. Selection of good test data can be extremely difficult. To ease and assist test data selection, several test data generators have emerged that use a diverse range of approaches. Adaptive test data generators use existing test data to produce further effective test data. It has been observed that there is little empirical data on the adaptive approach. This thesis presents the Heuristically Aided Testing System (HATS), which is an adaptive test data generator that uses several heuristics. A heuristic embodies a test data generation technique. Four heuristics have been developed. The first heuristic, Direct Assignment, generates test data for conditions involving an input variable and a constant. The Alternating Variable heuristic determines a promising direction to modify input variables, then takes ever increasing steps in this direction. The Linear Predictor heuristic performs linear extrapolations on input variables. The final heuristic, Boundary Follower, uses input domain boundaries as a guide to locate hard-to-find solutions. Several Ada procedures have been tested with HATS; a quadratic equation solver, a triangle classifier, a remainder calculator and a linear search. Collectively they present some common and rare test data generation problems. The weakest testing criterion HATS has attempted to satisfy is all branches. Stronger, mutation-based criteria have been used on two of the procedures. HATS has achieved complete branch coverage on each procedure, except where there is a higher level of control flow complexity combined with non-linear input variables. Both branch and mutation testing criteria have enabled a better understanding of the test data generation problems and contributed to the evolution of heuristics and the development of new heuristics. This thesis contributes the following to knowledge: Empirical data on the adaptive heuristic approach to test data generation. How input domain boundaries can be used as guidance for a heuristic. An effective heuristic termination technique based on the heuristic's progress. A comparison of HATS with random testing. Properties of the test software that indicate when HATS will take less effort than random testing are identified.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:bl.uk/oai:ethos.bl.uk:265673
Date January 1996
CreatorsHolmes, Stephen Terry
PublisherUniversity of South Wales
Source SetsEthos UK
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeElectronic Thesis or Dissertation
Sourcehttps://pure.southwales.ac.uk/en/studentthesis/heuristic-generation-of-software-test-data(aa20a88e-32a5-4958-9055-7abc11fbc541).html

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