Validating quality of service for reusable software via model-integrated distributed continuous quality assurance

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Abstract

Quality assurance (QA) tasks, such as testing, profiling, and performance evaluation, have historically been done in-house on developer-generated workloads and regression suites. Performanceintensive systems software, such as that found in the scientific computing grid and distributed real-time and embedded (DRE) domains, increasingly run on heterogeneous combinations of OS, compiler, and hardware platforms. Such software has stringent quality of service (QoS) requirements and often provides a variety of configuration options to optimize QoS. As a result, QA performed solely in-house is inadequate since it is hard to manage software variability, i.e., ensuring software quality on all supported target platforms across all desired configuration options. This paper describes how the Skoll project is addressing these issues by developing advanced QA processes and tools that leverage the extensive computing resources of user communities in a distributed, continuous manner to improve key software quality attributes. © Springer-Verlag 2004.

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APA

Krishna, A. S., Schmidt, D. C., Memon, A., Porter, A., & Sevilla, D. (2004). Validating quality of service for reusable software via model-integrated distributed continuous quality assurance. Lecture Notes in Computer Science (Including Subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics), 3107, 286–295. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-27799-6_24

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