DocumentCode
2088862
Title
A System Analysis Study Comparing Reverse Engineered Combinatorial Testing to Expert Judgment
Author
Cunningham, Atlee M., Jr. ; Hagar, Jon ; Holman, Ryan J.
fYear
2012
fDate
17-21 April 2012
Firstpage
630
Lastpage
635
Abstract
The Lockheed Martin F-16 ventral fin redesign-combinatorial test study effort was to demonstrate how Combinatorial Testing (CT) could have been applied to system hardware design flaw analysis. The historic analysis was able to determine a set of combinations, which isolated the problem and tested a solution. However, the original effort was expensive, time consuming, and required highly specialized knowledge from the expert to be effective. The new study was an effort to understand if combinatorial test could be applied to similar situations using the original data but conducted by a less senior person without an expert\´s knowledgebase. The situation and CT approaches are detailed in this paper. In the study, a series of iterations created combinatorial test cases which could have "replicated" the original highly optimized and successful test program, without the expert.
Keywords
aerospace components; aerospace computing; failure analysis; program testing; reverse engineering; CT approaches; Lockheed Martin F-16 ventral fin redesign combinatorial test study; expert judgment; reverse engineered combinatorial testing; system analysis study; system hardware design flaw analysis; test program; Aerodynamics; Aircraft; Analytical models; Fatigue; Industries; NIST; Testing; Case-Study; Combinatorial Test; Design problem;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Software Testing, Verification and Validation (ICST), 2012 IEEE Fifth International Conference on
Conference_Location
Montreal, QC
Print_ISBN
978-1-4577-1906-6
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ICST.2012.151
Filename
6200163
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