Friday, January 25, 2019 - 11:00 am
Innovation Center, Room 2277
Speaker: Christian Kaestner Affiliation: Carnegie Mellon University Location: Innovation Center, Room 2277 Time: Jan 25 (11am-12) Abstract: Breaking the API of a package can create severe disruptions downstream, but package maintainers have flexibility in whether and how to perform a change. Through interviews and a survey, we found that developers within a community or platform often share cohesive practices (e.g., semver, backporting, synchronized releases), but that those practices differ from community to community, and that most developers are not aware of alternative strategies and practices, their tradeoffs, and why other communities adopt them. Most interestingly, it seems that often practices and community consensus seems to be driven by implicit values in each community, such as stability, rapid access, or ease to contribute. Understanding and discussing values openly can help to understand and resolve conflicts, such as discussions between demands for more stability and a pursuit of frequent and disruptive innovations. Bio: Christian Kästner is an associate professor in the School of Computer Science at Carnegie Mellon University. He received his PhD in 2010 from the University of Magdeburg, Germany, for his work on virtual separation of concerns. For his dissertation he received the prestigious GI Dissertation Award. His research interests include understanding collaboration in open source and correctness and understanding of systems with variability, including work on implementation mechanisms, tools, variability-aware analysis, type systems, feature interactions, empirical evaluations, and refactoring.