History
Terminology
''Mistake metamorphism'' (from Greek ''meta'' = "change", ''morph'' = "form") refers to the evolution of a defect in the final stage of software deployment. Transformation of a ''mistake'' committed by an analyst in the early stages of the software development lifecycle, which leads to a ''defect'' in the final stage of the cycle has been called ''mistake metamorphism''. Different stages of a mistake in the development cycle may be described as mistake,anomaly, fault, failure, error, exception, crash, glitch, bug, defect, incident, or side effect.Examples
Software bugs have been linked to disasters. * Software bugs in the Therac-25 radiation therapy machine were directly responsible for patient deaths in the 1980s. * In 1996, the European Space Agency's US$1 billion prototype Ariane 5 rocket was destroyed less than a minute after launch due to a bug in the on-board guidance computer program. * In 1994, an RAF Chinook helicopter crashed, killing 29; was initially blamed on pilot error, but was later thought to have been caused by a software bug in the engine-control computer. * Buggy software caused the early 21st century British Post Office scandal.Controversy
Sometimes the use of ''bug'' to describe the behavior of software is contentious due to perception. Some suggest that the term should be abandoned; contending that ''bug'' implies that the defect arose on its own and push to use ''defect'' instead since it more clearly indicates they are caused by a human. Some contend that ''bug'' may be used to cover up an intentional design decision. In 2011, after receiving scrutiny from US Senator Al Franken for recording and storing users' locations in unencrypted files, Apple called the behavior a bug. However, Justin Brookman of the Center for Democracy and Technology directly challenged that portrayal, stating "I'm glad that they are fixing what they call bugs, but I take exception with their strong denial that they track users."Prevention
Language support
Newer programming languages tend to be designed to prevent common bugs based on vulnerabilities of existing languages. Lessons learned from older languages such asTechniques
Style guidelines and defensive programming can prevent easy-to-miss typographical errors (typos). For example, most C-family programming languages allow the omission of braces around an instruction block if there's only a single instruction. The following code executes function only if is true: if (condition) foo(); But this code always executes : if (condition); foo(); Using braces - even if they're not strictly required - reliably prevents this error: if (condition) Enforcement of conventions may be manual (i.e. via code review) or via automated tools such as linters.Specification
Some contend that writing a program specification, which states the intended behavior of a program, can prevent bugs. Others, however, contend that formal specifications are impractical for anything but the shortest programs, because of problems of combinatorial explosion and indeterminacy.Software testing
One goal ofAgile practices
Agile software development may involve frequent software releases with relatively small changes. Defects are revealed by user feedback. With test-driven development (TDD), unit tests are written while writing the production code, and the production code is not considered complete until all tests have been written and complete successfully.Static analysis
Tools for static code analysis help developers by inspecting the program text beyond the compiler's capabilities to spot potential problems. Although in general the problem of finding all programming errors given a specification is not solvable (see halting problem), these tools exploit the fact that human programmers tend to make certain kinds of simple mistakes when writing software.Instrumentation
Tools to monitor the performance of the software as it is running, either specifically to find problems such as bottlenecks or to give assurance as to correct working, may be embedded in the code explicitly (perhaps as simple as a statement sayingPRINT "I AM HERE"
), or provided as tools. It is often a surprise to find where most of the time is taken by a piece of code, and this removal of assumptions might cause the code to be rewritten.
Open source
Open source development allows anyone to examine source code. A school of thought popularized by Eric S. Raymond as Linus's law says that popular open-source software has more chance of having few or no bugs than other software, because "given enough eyeballs, all bugs are shallow". This assertion has been disputed, however: computer security specialist Elias Levy wrote that "it is easy to hide vulnerabilities in complex, little understood and undocumented source code," because, "even if people are reviewing the code, that doesn't mean they're qualified to do so." An example of an open-source software bug was the 2008 OpenSSL vulnerability in Debian.Debugging
''Debugging'' can be a significant part of the software development lifecycle. Maurice Wilkes, an early computing pioneer, described his realization in the late 1940s that “a good part of the remainder of my life was going to be spent in finding errors in my own programs”. A program known as a debugger can help a programmer find faulty code by examining the inner workings of a program such as executing code line-by-line and viewing variable values. As an alternative to using a debugger, code may be instrumented with logic to output debug information to trace program execution and view values. Output is typically to console, window,Management
Severity
''Severity'' is a measure of impact the bug has. This impact may be data loss, financial, loss of goodwill and wasted effort. Severity levels are not standardized, but differ by context such as industry and tracking tool. For example, a crash in a video game has a different impact than a crash in a bank server. Severity levels might be ''crash or hang'', ''no workaround'' (user cannot accomplish a task), ''has workaround'' (user can still accomplish the task), ''visual defect'' (a misspelling for example), or ''documentation error''. Another example set of severities: ''critical'', ''high'', ''low'', ''blocker'', ''trivial''. The severity of a bug may be a separate category to its priority for fixing, or the two may be quantified and managed separately. A bug severe enough to delay the release of the product is called a ''show stopper''.Priority
''Priority'' describes the importance of resolving the bug in relation to other bugs. Priorities might be numerical, such as 1 through 5, or named, such as ''critical'', ''high'', ''low'', and ''deferred''. The values might be similar or identical to severity ratings, even though priority is a different aspect. Priority may be a combination of the bug's severity with the level of effort to fix. A bug with low severity but easy to fix may get a higher priority than a bug with moderate severity that requires significantly more effort to fix.Patch
Bugs of sufficiently high priority may warrant a special release which is sometimes called a '' patch''.Maintenance release
A software release that emphasizes bug fixes may be called a ''maintenance'' release to differentiate it from a release that emphasizes new features or other changes.Known issue
It is common practice to release software with known, low-priority bugs or other issues. Possible reasons include but are not limited to: * A deadline must be met and resources are insufficient to fix all bugs by the deadline * The bug is already fixed in an upcoming release, and it is not of high priority * The changes required to fix the bug are too costly or affect too many other components, requiring a major testing activity * It may be suspected, or known, that some users are relying on the existing buggy behavior; a proposed fix may introduce a breaking change * The problem is in an area that will be obsolete with an upcoming release; fixing it is unnecessary * "It's not a bug, it's a feature" A misunderstanding exists between expected and actual behavior or undocumented featureImplications
The amount and type of damage a software bug may cause affects decision-making, processes and policy regarding software quality. In applications such as human spaceflight,Cost
In 1994, NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center managed to reduce their average number of errors from 4.5 per 1,000 lines of code ( SLOC) down to 1 per 1000 SLOC. Another study in 1990 reported that exceptionally good software development processes can achieve deployment failure rates as low as 0.1 per 1000 SLOC. This figure is iterated in literature such as '' Code Complete'' by Steve McConnell, and the ''NASA study on Flight Software Complexity''. Some projects even attained zero defects: theBenchmark
To facilitate reproducible research on testing and debugging, researchers use curated benchmarks of bugs: * the Siemens benchmark * ManyBugs is a benchmark of 185 C bugs in nine open-source programs. * Defects4J is a benchmark of 341 Java bugs from 5 open-source projects. It contains the corresponding patches, which cover a variety of patch type.Types
Some notable types of bugs:Design error
A bug can be caused by insufficient or incorrect design based on the specification. For example, given that the specification is to alphabetize a list of words, a design bug might occur if the design does not account for symbols; resulting in incorrect alphabetization of words with symbols.Arithmetic
Numerical operations can result in unexpected output, slow processing, or crashing. Such a bug can be from a lack of awareness of the qualities of the data storage such as a loss of precision due to rounding, numerically unstable algorithms, arithmetic overflow and underflow, or from lack of awareness of how calculations are handled by different software coding languages such as division by zero which in some languages may throw an exception, and in others may return a special value such as NaN orControl flow
A control flow bug, a.k.a. logic error, is characterized by code that does not fail with an error, but does not have the expected behavior, such as infinite looping, infiniteInterfacing
* Incorrect API usage. * Incorrect protocol implementation. * Incorrect hardware handling. * Incorrect assumptions of a particular platform. * Incompatible systems. A new API or communications protocol may seem to work when two systems use different versions, but errors may occur when a function or feature implemented in one version is changed or missing in another. In production systems which must run continually, shutting down the entire system for a major update may not be possible, such as in the telecommunication industry or the internet. In this case, smaller segments of a large system are upgraded individually, to minimize disruption to a large network. However, some sections could be overlooked and not upgraded, and cause compatibility errors which may be difficult to find and repair. * Incorrect code annotations.Concurrency
* Deadlock a task cannot continue until a second finishes, but at the same time, the second cannot continue until the first finishes. * Race condition multiple simultaneous tasks compete for resources. * Errors in critical sections, mutual exclusions and other features of concurrent processing. Time-of-check-to-time-of-use (TOCTOU) is a form of unprotected critical section.Resourcing
*Syntax
* Use of the wrong token, such as performing assignment instead of #Equality">equality test. For example, in some languagesTeamwork
* Unpropagated updates; e.g. programmer changes "myAdd" but forgets to change "mySubtract", which uses the same algorithm. These errors are mitigated by the Don't Repeat Yourself philosophy. * Comments out of date or incorrect: many programmers assume the comments accurately describe the code. * Differences between documentation and product.In politics
"Bugs in the System" report
The Open Technology Institute, run by the group, New America, released a report "Bugs in the System" in August 2016 stating that U.S. policymakers should make reforms to help researchers identify and address software bugs. The report "highlights the need for reform in the field of software vulnerability discovery and disclosure." One of the report's authors said that Congress has not done enough to address cyber software vulnerability, even though Congress has passed a number of bills to combat the larger issue of cyber security. Government researchers, companies, and cyber security experts are the people who typically discover software flaws. The report calls for reforming computer crime and copyright laws.In popular culture
* In video gaming, the term " glitch" is sometimes used to refer to a software bug. An example is the glitch and unofficial Pokémon species MissingNo. * In both the 1968 novel '' 2001: A Space Odyssey'' and the corresponding film of the same name, the spaceship's onboard computer, HAL 9000, attempts to kill all its crew members. In the follow-up 1982 novel, '' 2010: Odyssey Two'', and the accompanying 1984 film, '' 2010: The Year We Make Contact'', it is revealed that this action was caused by the computer having been programmed with two conflicting objectives: to fully disclose all its information, and to keep the true purpose of the flight secret from the crew; this conflict caused HAL to become paranoid and eventually homicidal. * In the English version of the Nena 1983 song '' 99 Luftballons'' (99 Red Balloons) as a result of "bugs in the software", a release of a group of 99 red balloons are mistaken for an enemy nuclear missile launch, requiring an equivalent launch response and resulting in catastrophe. * In the 1999 American comedy '' Office Space'', three employees attempt (unsuccessfully) to exploit their company's preoccupation with the Y2K computer bug using a computer virus that sends rounded-off fractions of a penny to their bank account—a long-known technique described as salami slicing. * The 2004 novel ''The Bug'', by Ellen Ullman, is about a programmer's attempt to find an elusive bug in a database application. * The 2008 Canadian film '' Control Alt Delete'' is about a computer programmer at the end of 1999 struggling to fix bugs at his company related to the year 2000 problem.See also
* Anti-pattern * Automatic bug fixing * Bug bounty program * Glitch removal * Hardware bug * ISO/IEC 9126, which classifies a bug as either a ''defect'' or a ''nonconformity'' * List of software bugs * Orthogonal Defect Classification * Racetrack problem * RISKS Digest * Single-event upset * Software defect indicator * Software regression * Software rot * VUCAReferences
External links
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