The craft of software testing : subsystem testing including object-based and object-oriented testing

Author(s)
    • Marick, Brian
Bibliographic Information

The craft of software testing : subsystem testing including object-based and object-oriented testing

Brian Marick

(Prentice Hall series in innovative technology)

PTR Prentice Hall, c1995

Search this Book/Journal
Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. 523-528) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

For software developers testing their own code or designs; indepdendent testers testing someone else's code; and testers or developers testing bug fixes and other maintenance changes. This reference presents, in detail, an effective, step-by-step, cost- effective approach to software testing that is based on common practice-with improvements inspired by academic testing research and practial experience. The approach is designed to be gradually adoptable, so that it does not disrupt current work, and it scales down gracefully under schedule pressure. Outlines a systematic process/strategy of software testing that incorporates test design, test implementation, and measurements of test quality. Explains solid testing techniques in detail and shows how to apply them to testing tasks. Answers such questions as: How do I design tests? What are common tester errors, and how do I avoid them? How do I implement tests? How do I know how good my tests are? How do I know when I've tested enough? Features unique coverge of testing bug fixes and other changes.

Table of Contents

1. Should You Read This Book? 2. An Overview of Subsystem Testing. I. THE BASIC TECHNIQUE. 3. The Specification. 4. Introduction to the SREADHEX Example. 5. Building the Test Requirement Checklist. 6. Test Specifications. 7. Test Drivers and Suite Drivers. 8. Inspecting the Code with the Question Catalog. 9. Using Coverage to Test the Test Suite. 10. Cleaning Up. 11. Miscellaneous Tips. II. ADOPTING SUBSYTEM TESTING. 12. Getting Going. 13. Getting Good. III. SUBSYSTEM TESTING IN PRACTICE. 14. Using More Typical Specifications (Including None at All). 15. Working with Large Subsystems. 16. Testing Bug Fixes and Other Maintenance Changes. 17. Testing Under Schedule Pressure. IV. EXAMPLES AND EXTENSIONS. 18. Syntax Testing. 19. A Second Complete Example: MAX. 20. Testing Persistent State. V. MULTIPLYING TEST REQUIREMENTS. 21. Simpler Test Requirement Multiplication. 22. Multiplying Operation Test Requirements. APPENDICES. A. Test Requirement Catalog (Student Version). B. Test Requirement Catalog (Standard Version). C. POSIX-Specific Test Requirement Catalog (Sample). D. A Question Catalog for Code Inspections. E. Requirements for Complex Booleans Catalog. F. Checklists for Test Writing. Glossary. Bibliography.

by "Nielsen BookData"

Related Books: 1-1 of 1
Details
Page Top