Software testing is important activity in Software Development Life Cycle. To cut down cost of manual testing and to increase reliability of it, researchers and practitioners have tried to automate it. One of the important activity in testing environment is automatic test case generation - description of a test, independent of the way a given software system is designed. This paper presents a survey on automatic test case generation techniques that are found in the current literature. Problems in usage of certain techniques are identified. Areas that needed future research are presented.
UCTSystem is a prototype tool designed to perform automatic test generation from UML requirements. It uses UML use cases enhenced with contracts (i.e. precondition and postconditions) to build an execution model allowing all valid sequences of use cases. Using this execution model and several test criteria, it generates test objectives as sequence of use cases to exerce. It includes both criteria for functional testing and a criterion for robusness testing. Those test objectives are then mapped into test cases using test templates.
Type in title and author, and all data on your book is automatically download from national libraries and online bookstores (like Amazon or BN.com). Can capture book cover images. Your book database will be searchable.
Crucible is a flexible, layered set of tools for pulling down software from the web, building it, running tests on it, and reporting any unusual behaviors back to the parent project.
But since every testing project is unique, we strive to structure Crucible as a set of distinct tools that can be used independently or in other frameworks. Thus, if you're working on your own test harness, we hope you can cherry pick something of use to you from Crucible. :-)
TeSSI® (Terminology Supported Semantic Indexing) is a state-of-the-art tool that improves upon the existing search and retrieval tools by extracting the meaning out of medical free text and placing the resulting medical ‘concepts’ in the document...
TeSSI® (Terminology Supported Semantic Indexing) is a state-of-the-art tool that improves upon the existing search and retrieval tools by extracting the meaning out of medical free text and placing the resulting medical ‘concepts’ in the document ind
S. Bergsmann, A. Schmidt, S. Fischer, and R. Ramler. Proceedings of the 15th ACM International Workshop on Automating Test Case Design, Selection and Evaluation, page 12–15. New York, NY, USA, Association for Computing Machinery, (Sep 12, 2024)