Treffer: Extracting monitors from JUnit tests

Title:
Extracting monitors from JUnit tests
Publisher Information:
University of Malta. Faculty of ICT
Publication Year:
2014
Collection:
University of Malta: OAR@UM / L-Università ta' Malta
Document Type:
Konferenz conference object
Language:
English
Rights:
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess ; The copyright of this work belongs to the author(s)/publisher. The rights of this work are as defined by the appropriate Copyright Legislation or as modified by any successive legislation. Users may access this work and can make use of the information contained in accordance with the Copyright Legislation provided that the author must be properly acknowledged. Further distribution or reproduction in any format is prohibited without the prior permission of the copyright holder.
Accession Number:
edsbas.B4E27316
Database:
BASE

Weitere Informationen

A large portion of the software development industry relies on testing as the main technique for quality assurance while other techniques which can provide extra guarantees are largely ignored. A case in point is runtime verification which provides assurance that a system’s execution flow is correct at runtime. Compared to testing, this technique has the advantage of checking the actual runs of a system rather than a number of representative testcases. Based on experience with the local industry, one of the main reasons for this lack of uptake of runtime verification is the extra effort required to formally specify the correctness criteria to be checked at runtime — runtime verifiers are typically synthesised from formal specifications. One potential approach to counteract this issue would be to use the information available in tests to automatically obtain monitors. The plausibility of this approach is the similarity between tests and runtime verifiers: tests drive the system under test and check that the outcome is correct while runtime verifiers let the system users drive the system under observation but still has to check that the outcome is as expected. ; peer-reviewed