A Decision Framework on Refactoring Architectural Technical Debt: Paying Back in Modularity- An Industrial Case Study
Abstract
Technical debt refers to sub-optimal solutions during software development where
there is a trade-o between short-term and long-term goals. Lately there has been a
few studies which identi es technical debt, however most of the do not estimate the
interest which is associated with the identi ed debt. Knowing how much interest
is being paid allows the developers to make informed decisions of what will bene t
the development. One example is knowing if a onetime cost of a repaying the debt
outweighs the cost of paying the interest of that debt. This would mean that the
repayment can be seen as an investment for future development. This thesis aims to
develop a decision framework that can be used when deciding if part of a component
would bene t from being modularized into a new component or framework to repay
a debt. To accomplish this, the study developed two methods that are used by
the decision framework. The rst method is to nd out if the analysed part of
the components would bene t from such a modularization. The second method
estimates how much e ort can be saved by doing a modularization. It was found
that for the rst method, a measurement system which analysed the component's
source code was a good approach in deciding if a modularization would be bene cial.
For the second method an approach which used data regarding the current e ort
distribution to estimate the e ort saved by modularizing was chosen. The result of
combining the two methods was found to be an adequate decision framework which
provides useful information in the decision if to modularize part of a component or
not.
Degree
Student essay
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2016-02-19Author
Sikander, Erik
Madlani, Neil
Language
eng