Investigating Fault Localization Techniques from Other
Disciplines for Software Engineering
Árpád Beszédes
In many different engineering fields, fault localization
means narrowing down the cause of a failure to a small number of
suspicious components of the system. This activity is an important
concern in many areas, and there have been a large number of
techniques proposed to aid this activity. Some of the basic ideas
used are common to different fields, but generally quite diverse
approaches are applied. Our long-term goal with the presented
research is to identify potential techniques from non-software
domains that have not yet been fully leveraged to software faults,
and investigate their applicability and adaptation to our field.
We performed an analysis of related literature, not limiting the
search to any specific engineering field, with the aim to find
solutions in non-software areas that could be most successfully
adapted to software fault localization. We found out that few
areas have significant literature in the topic that are good
candidates for adaptation (computer networks, for instance), and
that although some classes of methods are less suitable, there are
useful ideas in almost all fields that could potentially be
reused. As an example of potential novel techniques for software
fault localization, we present three concrete techniques from
other fields and how they could potentially be adapted.
Keywords: Faults, Defects, Fault Localization, Software
Fault Localization, Literature Review, Interdisciplinary Aspects
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