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Failure dataset accompanying the paper "How Bad Can a Bug Get? An Empirical Analysis of Software Failures in the OpenStack Cloud Computing Platform"

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1. Dataset Description

This failure dataset contains the injected faults, the workload, the effects of failure (both the user-side impact and our own in-depth correctness checks), and the error logs produced by the OpenStack cloud management system. Please refers to the paper How Bad Can a Bug Get? An Empirical Analysis of Software Failures in the OpenStack Cloud Computing Platform accepted for presentation at the ESEC-FSE 2019 conference.

Please, cite the paper if you use the dataset for your research:

@inproceedings{cotroneo2019bad,
  title={How bad can a bug get? an empirical analysis of software failures in the OpenStack cloud computing platform},
  author={Cotroneo, Domenico and De Simone, Luigi and Liguori, Pietro and Natella, Roberto and Bidokhti, Nematollah},
  booktitle={Proceedings of the 2019 27th ACM Joint Meeting on European Software Engineering Conference and Symposium on the Foundations of Software Engineering},
  pages={200--211},
  year={2019}
}

2. Project Organization

The failure dataset includes the raw logs from fault injection experiments in OpenStack. The tests are grouped per injected sub-system (i.e., Nova, Cinder, and Neutron).

There is a total of 911 tests: 439 for Nova, 269 for Cinder, and 203 for Neutron. The logs of each experiment are saved in a folder named "Test_id", where "id" is an incremental number that identifies the test.

The files "cinder.tsv", "neutron.tsv" and "nova.tsv" are tsv file containing the failure analysis of the experiments. The csv files consist of three fields:

  • Test: It is the name of the folder that contains the specific test;
  • Fault_Type: It is the type of the injected fault from the list described in the paper;
  • Component: It is the name of the source code file to be mutated;
  • Class: It is the name of the class which contains the mutated statement;
  • Function: It is the name of the function which contains the mutated statement;
  • Fault_Point: It is the target statement;
  • Round_1 is "FAILURE" if the experiment failed in the faulty round, "NO_FAILURE" otherwise;
  • Assertion_R1: if it exists, this field contains the assertion failure during the faulty round;
  • API_R1: if it exists, this field contains the api error occurred during the faulty round;
  • Round_2 is "FAILURE" if the experiment failed in the fault-free round, "NO_FAILURE" otherwise;
  • Assertion_R2: if it exists, this field contains the assertion failure during the fault-free round;
  • API_R2: if it exists, this field contains the api error occurred during the fault-free round.

In this Github repository you can find the tools to reproduce these experiments.

2.1 Structure of the test folders

Every test folder contains the following files:

  • "fp_info.data": It contains information about the fault injected in the experiment (including the fault type, the target component, the target class, the target function, and the fault injection point);
  • "orig_file": It contains the target component before the mutation;
  • "mutated_file": It contains the target component after the mutation;
  • "diff": It is the diff file between the orig_file and mutated_file;

The subfolder "Test_<id>/logs" contains the raw logs of the executions of both the faulty round ("round_1" subfolder) and the fault-free round ("round_2" subfolder).

In each round subfolder, there are more subfolders representing different sub-systems of OpenStack (e.g., "nova", "cinder", "neutron", "glance", etc.) containing the log messages generated during the tests.

For example, the directory "Nova/Test_1/logs/round_1/cinder" contains the log messages from the Cinder sub-system during the faulty execution of "Test 1", from the fault injection campaign on the Nova sub-system.

Furthermore, for each round, there is the "foreground_wl" subfolder containing the log files of the workload:

  • openstack_demo_workload-timestamp.out.log.bzip2.out (contains the log messages of the workload execution)

  • openstack_demo_workload-timestamp.err.log.bzip2.out (contains the error messages during the workload execution, including both API Errors and Assertion Failures).

Each subfolder "Test_<id>/logs/round_number" contains also the file "trace_Test_<id>_round_number". This file is a JSON file containing all the messages exchanged in OpenStack during the execution of the workload. These messages are collected with the distributed tracing system Zipkin. For further details about the information collected, please refer to the paper Enhancing Failure Propagation Analysis in Cloud Computing Systems.

Finally, in the subfolder "Test_<id>/logs/round_1", you can find the file "trigger_log" containing the timestamp of the fault activation during the workload execution.

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Failure dataset accompanying the paper "How Bad Can a Bug Get? An Empirical Analysis of Software Failures in the OpenStack Cloud Computing Platform"

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