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1 These courseware materials are to be used in conjunction with Software Engineering: A Practitioner’s Approach, 5/e and are provided with permission by R.S. Pressman & Associates, Inc., copyright © 1996, 2001 Chapter 17 Software Testing Techniques
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2 These courseware materials are to be used in conjunction with Software Engineering: A Practitioner’s Approach, 5/e and are provided with permission by R.S. Pressman & Associates, Inc., copyright © 1996, 2001 Software Testing Testing is the process of exercising a program with the specific intent of finding errors prior to delivery to the end user.
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3 These courseware materials are to be used in conjunction with Software Engineering: A Practitioner’s Approach, 5/e and are provided with permission by R.S. Pressman & Associates, Inc., copyright © 1996, 2001 Testability Operability—it operates cleanly Observability—the results of each test case are readily observed Controlability—the degree to which testing can be automated and optimized Decomposability—testing can be targeted Simplicity—reduce complex architecture and logic to simplify tests Stability—few changes are requested during testing Understandability—of the design
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4 These courseware materials are to be used in conjunction with Software Engineering: A Practitioner’s Approach, 5/e and are provided with permission by R.S. Pressman & Associates, Inc., copyright © 1996, 2001 What Testing Shows errors requirements conformance performance an indication of quality
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5 These courseware materials are to be used in conjunction with Software Engineering: A Practitioner’s Approach, 5/e and are provided with permission by R.S. Pressman & Associates, Inc., copyright © 1996, 2001 Who Tests the Software? developer independent tester Understands the system but, will test "gently" and, is driven by "delivery" Must learn about the system, but, will attempt to break it and, is driven by quality
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6 These courseware materials are to be used in conjunction with Software Engineering: A Practitioner’s Approach, 5/e and are provided with permission by R.S. Pressman & Associates, Inc., copyright © 1996, 2001 Exhaustive Testing loop < 20 X There are 10 possible paths! If we execute one test per millisecond, it would take 3,170 years to test this program!! 14
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7 These courseware materials are to be used in conjunction with Software Engineering: A Practitioner’s Approach, 5/e and are provided with permission by R.S. Pressman & Associates, Inc., copyright © 1996, 2001 Selective Testing loop < 20 X Selected path
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8 These courseware materials are to be used in conjunction with Software Engineering: A Practitioner’s Approach, 5/e and are provided with permission by R.S. Pressman & Associates, Inc., copyright © 1996, 2001 Software Testing Methods Strategies white-box methods black-box methods
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9 These courseware materials are to be used in conjunction with Software Engineering: A Practitioner’s Approach, 5/e and are provided with permission by R.S. Pressman & Associates, Inc., copyright © 1996, 2001 Test Case Design "Bugs lurk in corners and congregate at boundaries..." Boris Beizer OBJECTIVE CRITERIA CONSTRAINT to uncover errors in a complete manner with a minimum of effort and time
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10 These courseware materials are to be used in conjunction with Software Engineering: A Practitioner’s Approach, 5/e and are provided with permission by R.S. Pressman & Associates, Inc., copyright © 1996, 2001 White-Box Testing... our goal is to ensure that all statements and conditions have been executed at least once...
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11 These courseware materials are to be used in conjunction with Software Engineering: A Practitioner’s Approach, 5/e and are provided with permission by R.S. Pressman & Associates, Inc., copyright © 1996, 2001 Why Cover? logic errors and incorrect assumptions are inversely proportional to a path's execution probability we often believe that a path is not that a path is not likely to be executed; in fact, reality is often counter intuitive typographical errors are random; it's likely that untested paths will contain some
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12 These courseware materials are to be used in conjunction with Software Engineering: A Practitioner’s Approach, 5/e and are provided with permission by R.S. Pressman & Associates, Inc., copyright © 1996, 2001 Basis Path Testing First, we compute the cyclomatic complexity: number of simple decisions + 1 or number of enclosed areas + 1 In this case, V(G) = 4
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13 These courseware materials are to be used in conjunction with Software Engineering: A Practitioner’s Approach, 5/e and are provided with permission by R.S. Pressman & Associates, Inc., copyright © 1996, 2001 Cyclomatic Complexity A number of industry studies have indicated that the higher V(G), the higher the probability or errors. V(G) modules modules in this range are more error prone
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14 These courseware materials are to be used in conjunction with Software Engineering: A Practitioner’s Approach, 5/e and are provided with permission by R.S. Pressman & Associates, Inc., copyright © 1996, 2001 Basis Path Testing Next, we derive the independent paths: Since V(G) = 4, there are four paths Path 1: 1,2,3,6,7,8 Path 2: 1,2,3,5,7,8 Path 3: 1,2,4,7,8 Path 4: 1,2,4,7,2,4,...7,8 Finally, we derive test cases to exercise these paths. 1 2 3 4 56 7 8
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15 These courseware materials are to be used in conjunction with Software Engineering: A Practitioner’s Approach, 5/e and are provided with permission by R.S. Pressman & Associates, Inc., copyright © 1996, 2001 Basis Path Testing Notes you don't need a flow chart, but the picture will help when you trace program paths count each simple logical test, compound tests count as 2 or more basis path testing should be applied to critical modules
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16 These courseware materials are to be used in conjunction with Software Engineering: A Practitioner’s Approach, 5/e and are provided with permission by R.S. Pressman & Associates, Inc., copyright © 1996, 2001 Loop Testing NestedLoops Concatenated Loops Unstructured Loops Simpleloop
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17 These courseware materials are to be used in conjunction with Software Engineering: A Practitioner’s Approach, 5/e and are provided with permission by R.S. Pressman & Associates, Inc., copyright © 1996, 2001 Loop Testing: Simple Loops Minimum conditions—Simple Loops 1. skip the loop entirely 2. only one pass through the loop 3. two passes through the loop 4. m passes through the loop m < n 5. (n-1), n, and (n+1) passes through the loop where n is the maximum number of allowable passes
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18 These courseware materials are to be used in conjunction with Software Engineering: A Practitioner’s Approach, 5/e and are provided with permission by R.S. Pressman & Associates, Inc., copyright © 1996, 2001 Loop Testing: Nested Loops Start at the innermost loop. Set all outer loops to their minimum iteration parameter values. Test the min+1, typical, max-1 and max for the innermost loop, while holding the outer loops at their minimum values. Move out one loop and set it up as in step 2, holding all other loops at typical values. Continue this step until the outermost loop has been tested. Nested Loops
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19 These courseware materials are to be used in conjunction with Software Engineering: A Practitioner’s Approach, 5/e and are provided with permission by R.S. Pressman & Associates, Inc., copyright © 1996, 2001 Loop Testing: Nested Loops If the loops are independent of one another then treat each as a simple loop then treat each as a simple loop else* treat as nested loops else* treat as nested loops endif* for example, the final loop counter value of loop 1 is used to initialize loop 2. Concatenated Loops
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20 These courseware materials are to be used in conjunction with Software Engineering: A Practitioner’s Approach, 5/e and are provided with permission by R.S. Pressman & Associates, Inc., copyright © 1996, 2001 Black-Box Testing requirements events input output
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21 These courseware materials are to be used in conjunction with Software Engineering: A Practitioner’s Approach, 5/e and are provided with permission by R.S. Pressman & Associates, Inc., copyright © 1996, 2001 Equivalence Partitioning userqueries mousepicks outputformats prompts FKinput data
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22 These courseware materials are to be used in conjunction with Software Engineering: A Practitioner’s Approach, 5/e and are provided with permission by R.S. Pressman & Associates, Inc., copyright © 1996, 2001 Equivalence Partitioning
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23 These courseware materials are to be used in conjunction with Software Engineering: A Practitioner’s Approach, 5/e and are provided with permission by R.S. Pressman & Associates, Inc., copyright © 1996, 2001 Partition system inputs and outputs into ‘equivalence sets’ If input is a 5-digit integer between 10,000 and 99,999, equivalence partitions are 10, 000 Choose test cases at the boundary of these sets 00000, 09999, 10000, 99999, 10001 Equivalence Partitioning
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24 These courseware materials are to be used in conjunction with Software Engineering: A Practitioner’s Approach, 5/e and are provided with permission by R.S. Pressman & Associates, Inc., copyright © 1996, 2001 Boundary Value Analysis userqueries mousepicks outputformats prompts FKinput data outputdomain input domain
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25 These courseware materials are to be used in conjunction with Software Engineering: A Practitioner’s Approach, 5/e and are provided with permission by R.S. Pressman & Associates, Inc., copyright © 1996, 2001 Other Black Box Techniques error guessing methods decision table techniques cause effect graphing
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