This is a replication package for our work has been accepted 29th edition of the IEEE International Conference on Software Analysis, Evolution and Reengineering will be held at University of Hawaii in Honolulu, Hawaii, March 15-18 2022.
Social coding platforms centred around git provide explicit facilities to share code between projects: forks, pull requests, cherry-picking to name but a few. Variant forks are an interesting phenomenon in that respect, as it permits for different projects to peacefully co-exist, yet explicitly acknowledge the common ancestry. Several researchers analysed forking practices on open source platforms and observed that variant forks get created frequently. However, today little is known on the motivations for launching such a variant fork. Is it mainly technical (e.g., diverging features), governance (e.g., diverging interests), legal (e.g., diverging licences), or do other factors come into play? In this paper we report the results of an exploratory qualitative analysis on the motivations behind variants creation and maintenance. We surveyed 105 maintainers of different active open source variant projects hosted on GitHub. Our study extends previous findings, identifying a number of fine-grained common motivations for launching a variant fork and listing concrete impediments for maintaining the co-existing projects.
@inproceedings{businge:saner:2022, author = {John Businge and Alexandre Decan and Ahmed Zerouali and Tom Mens and Serge Demeyer, Coen De Roover}, title = {Variant Forks -- Motivations and Impediments}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 29th edition of the IEEE International Conference on Software Analysis, Evolution and Reengineering}, year = {2022}, note = {Accepted},