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A case study of internetware development

Published: 03 November 2010 Publication History

Abstract

The open, dynamic and ever-changing characteristics of Internet have attracted much attention to carry out research on Internetware. Current researches mainly focus on the framework of the Internetware. However, there are a variety of issues facing the Internetware development today with more joint work distributed over the world, and how should we improve the efficiency of such development? In order to resolve this issue we investigate three open source projects from J2EE platform domain: JBossAS, JOnAS, and Apache Geronimo to find out that, in the sampled projects, how many people will involve the Internetware development, how they allocate the work, and how the speed to resolve the issues reported by the customer. By answering five research questions referred from the Apache study, we proposed four hypotheses: (1) Open source Interware development will have a core of developers who will create approximately 80% or more of the new functionality. The group will be no larger than 30 people; (2) In a specific server-side domain, the group who will repair defects and report issues will have the equal or even smaller number people compared to the core group; (3) Commercial support can attract more volunteers to the open source Internetware projects; (4) Open Source Internetware developments exhibit very rapid responses to customer issues.

References

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A. Mockus, R. T. Fielding, and J. Herbsleb, "A Case Study of Open Source Development: The Apache Server", 22nd International Conference on Software Engineering, pp. 263--272, Limerick, Ireland, June 4-1, 2000.
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F. Yang, J. Lu and H. Mei. "Technical framework for Internetware: An architecture centric approach." Science in China, Series F, Springer, 2008 51 (6): 610--622, 2008.
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G. V. Krogh, S. Spaeth, and K. R. Lakhani, "Community, Joining, and Specialization in Open Source Software Innovation: A Case Study", Research Policy 32(7), pp. 1217--1241, July 2003.
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J. Feller, B. Fitzgerald, and A. Hoek, "Making Sense of the Bazaar: First Workshop Open Source Software Engineering", ACM SIGSOFT Software Eng. Notes, vol. 26, no. 6, pp. 51--52, 2001.
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H. Mei. "Internetware: Challenges and Future Direction of Software Paradigm for Internet as a Computer". IEEE 23rd International Computer Software and Applications Conference (COMPSAC 2010), Seoul, South Korea, July 19--23, 2010.
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F. Linden, B. Lundell, and P. Marttiin, "Commodification of Industrial Software: A Case for Open Source", IEEE Software, Vol. 26, Issue. 4, pp. 77--83, 2009.
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JBoss Application Server, http://www.jboss.org/jbossas/.
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JOnAS, http://jonas.ow2.org/.
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Apache Geronimo, http://geronimo.apache.org/.
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Y. Li, M. Zhou, D. Cao, L. Zhang, "Constructing Flexible Application Servers with Off-the-Shelf Middleware Services Integration Framework", 10th International conference on software resue, ICSR 2008, pp. 343--346, May 2008.
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C. You, M. Zhou, Z. Xiao, H. Mei, "Towards A Well Structured and Dynamic Application Server", 33rd Annual IEEE International Computer Software and Applications Conference, COMPSAC 2009, pp 427--434, July 2009.
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A. Mockus, "Software support tools and experimental work", V. Basili and et al, editors, Empirical Software Engineering Issues: Critical Assessments and Future Directions, volume LNCS 4336, pp. 91--99. Springer, 2007.
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cover image ACM Other conferences
Internetware '10: Proceedings of the Second Asia-Pacific Symposium on Internetware
November 2010
159 pages
ISBN:9781450306942
DOI:10.1145/2020723
Permission to make digital or hard copies of all or part of this work for personal or classroom use is granted without fee provided that copies are not made or distributed for profit or commercial advantage and that copies bear this notice and the full citation on the first page. Copyrights for components of this work owned by others than ACM must be honored. Abstracting with credit is permitted. To copy otherwise, or republish, to post on servers or to redistribute to lists, requires prior specific permission and/or a fee. Request permissions from [email protected]

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  • Nanjing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics
  • CCF: China Computer Federation

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Association for Computing Machinery

New York, NY, United States

Publication History

Published: 03 November 2010

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Author Tags

  1. commercial involvement
  2. core team
  3. developer participation
  4. internetware development
  5. open source software

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Internetware 2010
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  • CCF

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Overall Acceptance Rate 55 of 111 submissions, 50%

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