How PHP Releases Are Adopted in the Wild?




Jukka Ruohonen, Ville Leppänen

Jian Lv, He (Jason) Zhang, Mike Hinchey, Xiao Liu

Asia-Pacific Software Engineering Conference

2017

Proceedings : Asia Pacific Software Engineering Conference

2017 24th Asia-Pacific Software Engineering Conference (APSEC)

71

80

10

978-1-5386-3682-4

978-1-5386-3681-7

1530-1362

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1109/APSEC.2017.13

https://arxiv.org/pdf/1710.05570



This empirical paper examines the adoption of PHP releases in the the contemporary world wide web. Motivated by continuous software engineering practices and software traceability improvements for release engineering, the empirical analysis is based on big data collected by web crawling. According to the empirical results based on discrete time-homogeneous Markov chain (DTMC) analysis, (i) adoption of PHP releases has been relatively uniform across the domains observed, (ii) which tend to also adopt either old or new PHP releases relatively infrequently. Although there are outliers, (iii) downgrading of PHP releases is generally rare. To some extent, (iv)  the results vary between the recent history from 2016 to early 2017 and the long-run evolution in the 2010s. In addition to these empirical results, the paper contributes to the software evolution and release engineering research traditions by elaborating the applied use of DTMCs for systematic empirical tracing of online software deployments.


Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 22:58