Defects4J is a collection of reproducible bugs collected with the goal of advancing software testing research.
Defects4J contains 395 bugs from the following open-source projects:
Identifier | Project name | Number of bugs |
---|---|---|
Chart | JFreechart | 26 |
Closure | Closure compiler | 133 |
Lang | Apache commons-lang | 65 |
Math | Apache commons-math | 106 |
Mockito | Mockito | 38 |
Time | Joda-Time | 27 |
Each bug has the following properties:
- Issue filed in the corresponding issue tracker, and issue tracker identifier mentioned in the fixing commit message.
- Fixed in a single commit -- the Defects4J maintainers manually pruned out irrelevant changes (e.g., refactorings or feature additions).
- Fixed by modifying the source code (as opposed to configuration files, documentation, or test files).
- A triggering test exists that failed before the fix and passes after the fix -- the test failure is not random or dependent on test execution order.
The (b)uggy and (f)ixed program revisions are labelled with <id>b
and
<id>f
, respectively (<id>
is an integer).
- Java 1.7
- Perl >= 5.0.10
- Git >= 1.9
- SVN >= 1.8
All bugs have been reproduced and triggering tests verified, using the latest version of Java 1.7. Note that using Java 1.8+ might result in unexpected failing tests on a fixed program version. The next major release of Defects4J will be compatible with Java 8.
Defects4J generates and executes tests in the timezone America/Los_Angeles
.
If you are using the bugs outside of the Defects4J framework, export the TZ
environment variable accordingly.
-
Clone Defects4J:
git clone https://github.com/rjust/defects4j
-
Initialize Defects4J (download the project repositories and external libraries, which are not included in the git repository for size purposes and to avoid redundancies):
cd defects4j
./init.sh
-
Add Defects4J's executables to your PATH:
export PATH=$PATH:"path2defects4j"/framework/bin
-
Check installation and get information for a specific project (commons lang):
defects4j info -p Lang
-
Get information for a specific bug (commons lang, bug 1):
defects4j info -p Lang -b 1
-
Checkout a buggy source code version (commons lang, bug 1, buggy version):
defects4j checkout -p Lang -v 1b -w /tmp/lang_1_buggy
-
Change to the working directory, compile sources and tests, and run tests:
cd /tmp/lang_1_buggy
defects4j compile
defects4j test
-
More examples of how to use the framework are available in
framework/test
-
"Defects4J: A Database of Existing Faults to Enable Controlled Testing Studies for Java Programs" René Just, Darioush Jalali, and Michael D. Ernst, ISSTA 2014 [download].
-
"Are Mutants a Valid Substitute for Real Faults in Software Testing?" René Just, Darioush Jalali, Laura Inozemtseva, Michael D. Ernst, Reid Holmes, and Gordon Fraser, FSE 2014 [download].
Detailed documentation for any script or module is available as html documentation.
Use framework/bin/defects4j
to execute any of the following commands:
Command | Description |
---|---|
info | View configuration of a specific project or summary of a specific bug |
checkout | Checkout a buggy or a fixed project version |
compile | Compile sources and developer-written tests of a buggy or a fixed project version |
test | Run a single test method or a test suite on a buggy or a fixed project version |
mutation | Run mutation analysis on a buggy or a fixed project version |
coverage | Run code coverage analysis on a buggy or a fixed project version |
monitor.test | Monitor the class loader during the execution of a single test or a test suite |
export | Export version-specific properties such as classpaths, directories, or lists of tests |
Use defects4j export -p <property_name> [-o output_file]
in the working
directory to export a version-specific property:
Property | Description |
---|---|
classes.modified | Classes (source files) modified by the bug fix |
cp.compile | Classpath to compile and run the project |
cp.test | Classpath to compile and run the developer-written tests |
dir.src.classes | Source directory of classes (relative to working directory) |
dir.bin.classes | Target directory of classes (relative to working directory) |
dir.src.tests | Source directory of tests (relative to working directory) |
tests.all | List of all developer-written test classes |
tests.relevant | List of relevant tests classes (a test class is relevant if, when executed, the JVM loads at least one of the modified classes) |
tests.trigger | List of test methods that trigger (expose) the bug |
The test execution framework for generated test suites (framework/bin
)
provides the following scripts:
Script | Description |
---|---|
run_bug_detection | ^Determine the real fault detection rate |
run_mutation | ^Determine the mutation score |
run_coverage | ^Determine code coverage ratios (statement and branch coverage) |
run_evosuite | Generate test suites using EvoSuite |
run_randoop | Generate test suites using Randoop |
^Note that this script requires Perl DBI. |
This is the top-level directory of Defects4J. The directory structure is as follows:
defects4j
|
|--- project_repos: The version control repositories of the provided projects.
|
|--- major: The Major mutation framework.
|
|--- framework: Libraries and executables of the database abstraction and
| test execution framework.
|
|--- bin: Command line interface to Defects4J.
|
|--- core: The modules of the core framework.
|
|--- lib: Libraries used in the core framework.
|
|--- util: Util scripts used by Defects4J.
|
|--- projects: Project-specific resource files.
|
|--- test: Scripts to test the framework.
- Scripts and annotations for evaluating APR techniques
- Patches generated with the Nopol, jGenProg, and jKali APR systems
MIT License, see license.txt
for more information.