@article {denBesten2008316, title = {The allocation of collaborative efforts in open-source software}, journal = {Information Economics and Policy}, volume = {20}, number = {4}, year = {2008}, note = {"we have selected a set of 10 large open-source projects" apache, cvs, gaim, gcc, ghostscript, mozilla, netbsd, openssh, postgresql, python "Our data were extracted from logs of development activity generated by software version control systems. For each project in the selection, we extracted CVS development logs" "We notably computed for each file in the sample, and for each month in its history, the number of distinct maintainers that had committed a change during that month, and the number of commits, the blocks of code addition, each file had received during that month." "other variables used in the regressions are proxies for the size, age, and granularity of files; the size of a file is represented as its number of lines of code (LOCs), its age by its creation date (Youth), and its granularity by the number of functions it contains."}, pages = {316 - 322}, abstract = {The article investigates the allocation of collaborative efforts among core developers (maintainers) of open-source software by analyzing on-line development traces (logs) for a set of 10 large projects. Specifically, we investigate whether the division of labor within open-source projects is influenced by characteristics of software code. We suggest that the collaboration among maintainers tends to be influenced by different measures of code complexity. We interpret these findings by providing preliminary evidence that the organization of open-source software development would self-adapt to characteristics of the code base, in a {\textquoteright}stigmergic{\textquoteright} manner.}, keywords = {age, apache, complexity, cvs, division of labor, functions, gaim, gcc, ghostscript, lines of code, loc, log files, mozilla, netbsd, openssh, postgresql, python, revision control, scm, size, source code, Stigmergy, version control}, issn = {0167-6245}, doi = {DOI: 10.1016/j.infoecopol.2008.06.003}, url = {http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/B6V8J-4SSG4PN-1/2/88b3824c30a31c18929d8a5ca6d64f62}, author = {den Besten, Matthijs and Jean-Michel Dalle and Galia, Fabrice} } @conference {682, title = {Collaborative Maintenance in Large Open-Source Projects}, booktitle = {OSS2006: Open Source Systems (IFIP 2.13)}, series = {IFIP International Federation for Information Processing}, year = {2006}, pages = {233 - 244}, publisher = {Springer}, organization = {Springer}, abstract = {The paper investigates collaborative work among maintainers of open source software by analyzing the logs of a set of 10 large projects. We inquire whether teamwork can be influenced by several characteristics of code. Preliminary results suggest that collaboration among maintainers in most large open-source projects seems to be positively influenced by file vintage and by Halstead volume of files, and negatively by McCabe complexity and size measured in SLOCs. These results could be consistent with an increased attractivity of files created early in the history of a project, and with maintainers being less attracted by more verbose code and by more complex code, although in this last case it might also reflect the fact that more complex files would be de facto more exclusive in terms of maintenance. }, keywords = {apache, COLLABORATION, complexity, cvs, gaim, gcc, ghostscript, halstead, lines of code, loc, mccabe, mozilla, netbsd, openssh, postgresql, python, sloc}, doi = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/0-387-34226-5_23}, attachments = {https://flosshub.org/sites/flosshub.org/files/Collaborative\%20Maintenance.pdf}, author = {den Besten, Matthijs and Jean-Michel Dalle and Galia, Fabrice} }