The Impact of Function Extraction Technology on Next-Generation Software Engineering
• Technical Report
Publisher
Software Engineering Institute
CMU/SEI Report Number
CMU/SEI-2005-TR-015DOI (Digital Object Identifier)
10.1184/R1/6585140.v1Topic or Tag
Abstract
Currently, software engineers lack practical means to determine the full functional behavior of complex programs. This gap in intellectual control is the source of many long-standing and intractable problems in security, software, and systems engineering. Function Extraction (FX) technology is directed to automated computation of full program behavior. FX is based on function-theoretic mathematical foundations of software that illuminate algorithmic methods for behavior computation. FX holds promise to replace resource-intensive, error-prone analysis of program behavior in human time scale with fast and correct analysis in computer time scale. The CERT organization of the Software Engineering Institute is conducting research and development in FX technology and is developing a Function Extraction for Malicious Code system to rapidly determine the behavior of malicious code expressed in Assembler Language. FX technology has the potential for transformational impact across the software engineering life cycle, from specification and design to implementation, testing, and evolution. This study investigates these impacts and, based on a survey of software professionals, defines a strategy for FX evolution that addresses high-leverage opportunities first. FX is an initial step in developing next-generation software engineering as a computational discipline.
Cite This Technical Report
Hevner, A., Linger, R., Collins, R., Pleszkoch, M., Prowell, S., & Walton, G. (2005, July 1). The Impact of Function Extraction Technology on Next-Generation Software Engineering. (Technical Report CMU/SEI-2005-TR-015). Retrieved November 23, 2024, from https://doi.org/10.1184/R1/6585140.v1.
@techreport{hevner_2005,
author={Hevner, Alan and Linger, Richard and Collins, Rosann and Pleszkoch, Mark and Prowell, Stacy and Walton, Gwendolyn},
title={The Impact of Function Extraction Technology on Next-Generation Software Engineering},
month={{Jul},
year={{2005},
number={{CMU/SEI-2005-TR-015},
howpublished={Carnegie Mellon University, Software Engineering Institute's Digital Library},
url={https://doi.org/10.1184/R1/6585140.v1},
note={Accessed: 2024-Nov-23}
}
Hevner, Alan, Richard Linger, Rosann Collins, Mark Pleszkoch, Stacy Prowell, and Gwendolyn Walton. "The Impact of Function Extraction Technology on Next-Generation Software Engineering." (CMU/SEI-2005-TR-015). Carnegie Mellon University, Software Engineering Institute's Digital Library. Software Engineering Institute, July 1, 2005. https://doi.org/10.1184/R1/6585140.v1.
A. Hevner, R. Linger, R. Collins, M. Pleszkoch, S. Prowell, and G. Walton, "The Impact of Function Extraction Technology on Next-Generation Software Engineering," Carnegie Mellon University, Software Engineering Institute's Digital Library. Software Engineering Institute, Technical Report CMU/SEI-2005-TR-015, 1-Jul-2005 [Online]. Available: https://doi.org/10.1184/R1/6585140.v1. [Accessed: 23-Nov-2024].
Hevner, Alan, Richard Linger, Rosann Collins, Mark Pleszkoch, Stacy Prowell, and Gwendolyn Walton. "The Impact of Function Extraction Technology on Next-Generation Software Engineering." (Technical Report CMU/SEI-2005-TR-015). Carnegie Mellon University, Software Engineering Institute's Digital Library, Software Engineering Institute, 1 Jul. 2005. https://doi.org/10.1184/R1/6585140.v1. Accessed 23 Nov. 2024.
Hevner, Alan; Linger, Richard; Collins, Rosann; Pleszkoch, Mark; Prowell, Stacy; & Walton, Gwendolyn. The Impact of Function Extraction Technology on Next-Generation Software Engineering. CMU/SEI-2005-TR-015. Software Engineering Institute. 2005. https://doi.org/10.1184/R1/6585140.v1