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Universal regexp-based mutation tool

Project description

This is a tool based purely on regexp-specified rewrite of code lines for mutation generation, including multi-language rules aided by special rules for languages or even projects.

More information on this project can be found at: https://agroce.github.io/icse18t.pdf

HOW TO USE IT

To use this, you should really just do:

pip install universalmutator

then

mutate --help

SIMPLE EXAMPLE USAGE

mutate foo.py

or

mutate foo.swift

should, if you have the appropriate compilers installed, generate a bunch of valid, non-trivially redundant, mutants.

A MORE COMPLEX EXAMPLE

Sometimes the mutated code needs to be built with a more complicated command than a simple compiler call, and of course you want help discovering which mutants are killed and not killed. For example, to mutate and test mutants for the mandelbrot plotting example included in Programming Rust (http://shop.oreilly.com/product/0636920040385.do), just do this:

git clone https://github.com/ProgrammingRust/mandelbrot
cd mandelbrot
cargo build
target/debug/mandelbrot origmandel.png 1000x750 -1.20,0.35 -1,0.20
mkdir mutants
mutate src/main.rs --mutantDir mutants --noCheck
analyze_mutants src/main.rs "cargo clean; cargo build; rm mandel.png; target/debug/mandelbrot mandel.png 1000x750 -1.20,0.35 -1,0.20; diff mandel.png origmandel.png" --mutantDir mutants

(It will go faster if you edit main.rs to lower the maximum number of threads used to something like 8, not 90.) At the moment, this won't use any Trivial Compiler Equivalence, but still kills about 60% of the 1000+ mutants. The killed mutant filenames will be in killed.txt and the non-killed ones in not-killed.txt.

Working with something like maven is very similar, except you can probably edit the complicated build/clean stuff to just a 'mvn test' or similar.

CURRENTLY SUPPORTED LANGUAGES

The tool will likely mutate other things, if you tell it they are "c" or something, but there is auto-detection based on file ending and specific rule support for:

C
C++
Java
Python
Swift
Rust
Go
Solidity

All but C, C++, and Go will try, by default, to compile the mutated file and use TCE to detect redundancy. Of course, build dependencies may frustrate this process, in which case --noCheck will turn off TCE and just dump all the mutants in the directory, for pruning using a real build process. In the long run, we plan to integrate with standard build systems to avoid this problem, and with automated test generation systems such as TSTL (https://github.com/agroce/tstl) for Python or Echidna for Solidity (https://github.com/trailofbits/echidna). Even now, however, with analyze_mutants it is fairly easy to set up automatic evaluation of your automated test generator.

MORE INFORMATON

For much more information, again see https://agroce.github.io/icse18t.pdf -- demo/tool paper at ICSE 18.

The aim of this project is partly to see how quickly mutation can be applied to new languages, partly how much the work of a tool can be offloaded to the compiler / test analysis tools.

Authors: Alex Groce, Josie Holmes, Darko Marinov, August Shi, Lingming Zhang

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