Published: July 31, 2012
Citation: Crosstalk (Hill AFB): the Journal of Defense Software Engineering vol. 25, no. 4, (July/August 2012) pp. 15-18
Author(s)
Richard Kuhn, J. Higdon, J. Lawrence, Raghu Kacker, Yu Lei
Many software testing problems involve sequences of events. The methods described in this paper were motivated by testing needs of mission critical systems that may accept multiple communication or sensor inputs and generate output to several communication links and other interfaces, where it is important to test the order in which events occur. Using combinatorial methods makes it possible to test sequences of events efficiently.
Many software testing problems involve sequences of events. The methods described in this paper were motivated by testing needs of mission critical systems that may accept multiple communication or sensor inputs and generate output to several communication links and other interfaces, where it is...
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Many software testing problems involve sequences of events. The methods described in this paper were motivated by testing needs of mission critical systems that may accept multiple communication or sensor inputs and generate output to several communication links and other interfaces, where it is important to test the order in which events occur. Using combinatorial methods makes it possible to test sequences of events efficiently.
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Keywords
combinatorial testing; covering arrays; event sequence testing; sequence covering arrays
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