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posted by martyb on Saturday December 22 2018, @12:32AM   Printer-friendly
from the Code-mangling dept.

It appears Facebook has a tool for automatically suggesting bug fixes.

  • Facebook has built a tool called Getafix that automatically finds fixes for bugs and offers them to engineers to approve. This allows engineers to work more effectively, and it promotes better overall code quality.
  • We believe Getafix is the first tool of its kind to be deployed to production at Facebook scale, contributing to the stability and performance of apps that billions of people use.
  • Getafix powers Sapfix, which suggests fixes for bugs that our Sapienz testing tool finds. Getafix also provides fixes for bugs found by Infer, our static testing tool.
  • Because Getafix learns from engineers’ past code fixes, its recommendations are intuitive for engineers to review.
  • Getafix improves upon previous auto-fix technology by using more powerful techniques for learning fix patterns from past code changes. Getafix uses a more powerful clustering algorithm and also analyzes the context around the particular lines of problematic code to find more appropriate fixes.

I wonder how easy it is to start accepting fixes without properly examining them. I wonder if the time saved in actually coding the fix is irrelevant compared with the time you would otherwise take to find the correct fix.

It will easily fix the obvious symptoms of a bug without addressing the real problem. The illusion of productivity.


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  • (Score: 2) by krishnoid on Saturday December 22 2018, @02:54AM

    by krishnoid (1156) on Saturday December 22 2018, @02:54AM (#777414)

    It will easily fix the obvious symptoms of a bug without addressing the real problem.

    Sounds like minor mutations producing a sort of directed evolution -- something that makes code more 'responsible' for its own correct operation and moves away from identifying a possibly deeper root cause, or even better, moving closer to algorithmically classifying developers by their code quality or consistency.

    Lets all raise a glass over the holidays to the olden days of classical debugging and welcome our new self-adjusting AI overlords. (More vodka over here, please).

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