Author: Yuri Chernak, Ph.D.
Abstract – For several decades, software reuse has been a recognized solution to improving efficiency of software development. However, implementing reuse in practice remains challenging and the IT community has little visibility into the state of the practice specifically as it pertains to reusing software requirements. This paper presents the results of a survey conducted in the global IT industry in 2010 and discusses the state of the practice for software requirements reuse. The survey studies reuse adoption in two different contexts, i.e., Software Product Lines and Software Maintenance. The analysis of the survey data focuses on the latter context as a more common case in practice and investigates the impact of various factors on reuse adoption and effectiveness.
INTRODUCTION
Software reuse is a recognized solution to the three primary drivers of the software business – faster, better, cheaper. This topic has been the focus of the IT industry for several decades and it has been addressed in many publications, e.g. [1- 5]. All major products of a software process, for example requirements, architectural components, and software code, can be subject to reusing in two separate contexts – a) for developing similar applications, and b) for implementing releases of the same application. The first context is known as Software Product Lines (SPL), a.k.a., Domain Engineering [6 - 8]. The second context is known as Software Maintenance [9 - 11].
In practice, requirements reuse for software maintenance appears to have much more opportunities as opposed to the SPL case for two reasons:
Broad adoption of requirements reuse in the IT industry still remains challenging for both contexts. So far, IT research has been primarily focused on studying requirements reuse in the SPL context [12, 13], whereas requirements reuse for releases in the Software Maintenance context has had much less attention. As a result, the IT community has little visibility into the state of the reuse practice in the latter context. Nor are the obstacles for adopting reuse and factors impacting reuse effectiveness well-understood. Lastly, IT practitioners lack recommendations for better reuse adoption for releases.
This article discusses the state of the practice of software requirements reuse in the global IT industry and presents the results of the survey conducted between March and August, 2010. The goal of this survey was twofold:
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