Title :
Understanding broadcast based peer review on open source software projects
Author :
Rigby, Peter C. ; Storey, Margaret-Anne
Author_Institution :
Software Eng. Group, Univ. of Victoria, Victoria, BC, Canada
Abstract :
Software peer review has proven to be a successful technique in open source software (OSS) development. In contrast to industry, where reviews are typically assigned to specific individuals, changes are broadcast to hundreds of potentially interested stakeholders. Despite concerns that reviews may be ignored, or that discussions will deadlock because too many uninformed stakeholders are involved, we find that this approach works well in practice. In this paper, we describe an empirical study to investigate the mechanisms and behaviours that developers use to find code changes they are competent to review. We also explore how stakeholders interact with one another during the review process. We manually examine hundreds of reviews across five high profile OSS projects. Our findings provide insights into the simple, community-wide techniques that developers use to effectively manage large quantities of reviews. The themes that emerge from our study are enriched and validated by interviewing long-serving core developers.
Keywords :
peer-to-peer computing; project management; public domain software; software engineering; software management; OSS project; broadcast based peer review; long-serving core developer; open source software project; Communities; Electronic mail; History; Interviews; Linux; Software; case studies; grounded theory; open source software; peer review;
Conference_Titel :
Software Engineering (ICSE), 2011 33rd International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Honolulu, HI
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4503-0445-0
Electronic_ISBN :
0270-5257
DOI :
10.1145/1985793.1985867