Emerald Login
   

Welcome guest



Article Request:
Monitoring the “health” status of open source web-engineering projects


Article Information:

Title:

Monitoring the “health” status of open source web-engineering projects

Author(s):

Dindin Wahyudin, Khabib Mustofa, Alexander Schatten, Stefan Biffl, A. Min Tjoa

Journal:

International Journal of Web Information Systems

Year:

2007

Volume:

3

Issue:

1/2

Page:

116 - 139


ISSN:

1744-0084


DOI:

10.1108/17440080710829252

Publisher:

Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Document Access:

Existing customers:

Please login above.

Purchase this document:
Price payable: GBP £13.00
plus handling charge of GBP £1.50 and VAT where applicable.
Purchase

Request this document:
Print or e-mail a document request to your librarian.
Request

Reprints & permissions:
Image: Rightslink Request

Abstract:

Purpose – In response to the increasing number of open-source software (OSS) project initiatives and the increasing demand of OSS products as alternative solutions by industries, it is important for particular stakeholders such as the project host/supporter project-leading teams, and prospective customers to determine whether a project initiative is likely to be sustainable and is worth supporting. This paper aims to propose a concept of “health” indicators and an evaluation process that can help to get a status overview of OSS projects in a timely fashion and predict project survivability based on the project data available on web repositories.

Design/methodology/approach – For initial empirical evaluation of the concept, the indicators are applied to well-known web-based OSS projects (Apache Tomcat and Apache HTTP Server) and the results are compared with challenged projects (Apache Xindice and Apache Slide). The results are discussed with OSS experts to investigate the external validity of the indicators.

Findings – From a software project management point of view, a typical web-based OSS project can be viewed as a web-engineering process, since most OSS projects exploit the benefits of a web platform and enable the project community to collaborate using web-based project tools and repositories such as mailing lists, bug trackers, and versioning systems (CVS/SVN) to deliver web systems and applications. These repositories can provide rich collections of process data, and artifacts which can be analyzed to better understand the project status.

Originality/value – The paper provides information of value about open-source solutions.

Keywords:

Computer software, Internet, Project management


Article Type:

Research paper


Article URL:

http://www.emeraldinsight.com/10.1108/17440080710829252

Top