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Main Authors: Pan, Shengyi, Wang, You, Liu, Zhongxin, Hu, Xing, Xia, Xin, Li, Shanping
Format: Preprint
Published: 2024
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2404.17964
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author Pan, Shengyi
Wang, You
Liu, Zhongxin
Hu, Xing
Xia, Xin
Li, Shanping
author_facet Pan, Shengyi
Wang, You
Liu, Zhongxin
Hu, Xing
Xia, Xin
Li, Shanping
contents Forking is a typical way of code reuse, which provides a simple way for developers to create a variant software (denoted as hard fork) by copying and modifying an existing codebase. Despite of the benefits, forking also leads to duplicate efforts in software maintenance. Developers need to port patches across the hard forks to address similar bugs or implement similar features. Due to the divergence between the source project and the hard fork, patch porting is complicated, which requires an adaption regarding different implementations of the same functionality. In this work, we take the first step to automate patch porting for hard forks under a zero-shot setting. We first conduct an empirical study of the patches ported from Vim to Neovim over the last ten years to investigate the necessities of patch porting and the potential flaws in the current practice. We then propose a large language model (LLM) based approach (namely PPatHF) to automatically port patches for hard forks on a function-wise basis. Specifically, PPatHF is composed of a reduction module and a porting module. Given the pre- and post-patch versions of a function from the reference project and the corresponding function from the target project, the reduction module first slims the input functions by removing code snippets less relevant to the patch. Then, the porting module leverages a LLM to apply the patch to the function from the target project. We evaluate PPatHF on 310 Neovim patches ported from Vim. The experimental results show that PPatHF outperforms the baselines significantly. Specifically, PPatHF can correctly port 131 (42.3%) patches and automate 57% of the manual edits required for the developer to port the patch.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2404_17964
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Automating Zero-Shot Patch Porting for Hard Forks
Pan, Shengyi
Wang, You
Liu, Zhongxin
Hu, Xing
Xia, Xin
Li, Shanping
Software Engineering
Forking is a typical way of code reuse, which provides a simple way for developers to create a variant software (denoted as hard fork) by copying and modifying an existing codebase. Despite of the benefits, forking also leads to duplicate efforts in software maintenance. Developers need to port patches across the hard forks to address similar bugs or implement similar features. Due to the divergence between the source project and the hard fork, patch porting is complicated, which requires an adaption regarding different implementations of the same functionality. In this work, we take the first step to automate patch porting for hard forks under a zero-shot setting. We first conduct an empirical study of the patches ported from Vim to Neovim over the last ten years to investigate the necessities of patch porting and the potential flaws in the current practice. We then propose a large language model (LLM) based approach (namely PPatHF) to automatically port patches for hard forks on a function-wise basis. Specifically, PPatHF is composed of a reduction module and a porting module. Given the pre- and post-patch versions of a function from the reference project and the corresponding function from the target project, the reduction module first slims the input functions by removing code snippets less relevant to the patch. Then, the porting module leverages a LLM to apply the patch to the function from the target project. We evaluate PPatHF on 310 Neovim patches ported from Vim. The experimental results show that PPatHF outperforms the baselines significantly. Specifically, PPatHF can correctly port 131 (42.3%) patches and automate 57% of the manual edits required for the developer to port the patch.
title Automating Zero-Shot Patch Porting for Hard Forks
topic Software Engineering
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2404.17964