FLOSS Communities: Analyzing Evolvability and Robustness from an Industrial Perspective

TitleFLOSS Communities: Analyzing Evolvability and Robustness from an Industrial Perspective
Publication TypeBook Chapter
Year of Publication2010
AuthorsIzquierdo-Cortazar, Daniel, Jesus M. Gonzalez-Barahona, Gregorio Robles, Jean-Christophe Deprez, and Vincent Auvray
EditorAgerfalk, Pär, Cornelia Boldyreff, Jesus M. Gonzalez-Barahona, Gregory Madey, and John Noll
Book TitleOpen Source Software: New Horizons
Series TitleIFIP Advances in Information and Communication Technology
Volume319
Chapter28
Pagination336–341
PublisherSpringer Boston
CityBerlin, Heidelberg
ISBN Number978-3-642-13243-8
ISBN9783642132438
Keywordsdata mining, libre software, libre software communities, quality models
Abstract

Plenty of companies try to access Free/Libre/Open Source Software (FLOSS) products, but they find a lack of documentation and responsiveness from the libre software community. But not all of the communities have the same capacity to answer questions. Even more, most of these communities are driven by volunteers which in most of the cases work on their spare time. Thus, how active and reliable is a community and how can we measure their risks in terms of quality of the community is a main issue to be resolved. Trying to determine how a community runs and look for their weaknesses is a way to improve themselves and, also, a way to obtain trustworthiness from an enterprise point of view. In order to have a statistical basement, around 1400 FLOSS projects have been studied to create thresholds which will help to determine a project's current status compared with this initial set of FLOSS communities.

URLhttp://oss2010.org/
DOIhttp://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-13244-5
AttachmentSize
[file] floss-communities-oss.pdf182.02 KB