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Mining Severe Priority Bugs in Software Maintenance
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
international journal of recent technology and engineering
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2277-3878
DOI - 10.35940/ijrte.d1130.1284s219
Subject(s) - software bug , identification (biology) , computer science , task (project management) , open source , software regression , software , security bug , process (computing) , software maintenance , software engineering , software development , engineering , computer security , software quality , biology , operating system , systems engineering , software security assurance , botany , information security , security service
Maintenance of open source software is a hectic task as the number of bugs reported is huge. The number of projects, components and versions in an open source project also contribute to the number of bugs that are being reported. Classification of bugs based on priority and identification of the suitable engineers for assignment of bugs for such huge systems still remains a major challenge. Bugs that are misclassified or assigned to engineers who don’t have the component expertise, drastically affect the time taken towards bug resolution. In this paper we have explored the usage of data mining techniques on the classification of bugs and assignment of bugs to engineers.Our focus was on classifying bugs as either severe or non-severe and identification of engineers who have the right expertise to fix the bugs. The prediction of bug severity and identification of engineers were done by mining bug reports from JIRA, an open source software bug tracking tool. The mining process yielded positive results and will be a decision enhancer for severe bugs in the maintenance phase

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