Bug Characteristics in Quantum Software Ecosystem
With the advance in quantum computing in recent years, quantum software becomes vital for exploring the full potential of quantum computing systems. Quantum programming is different from classical programming, for example, the state of a quantum program is probabilistic in nature, and a quantum comp...
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Zusammenfassung: | With the advance in quantum computing in recent years, quantum software
becomes vital for exploring the full potential of quantum computing systems.
Quantum programming is different from classical programming, for example, the
state of a quantum program is probabilistic in nature, and a quantum computer
is error-prone due to the instability of quantum mechanisms. Therefore, the
characteristics of bugs in quantum software projects may be very different from
that of classical software projects. This work aims to understand the
characteristics of bugs in quantum software projects, in order to provide
insights to help devise effective testing and debugging mechanisms. To achieve
this goal, we conduct an empirical study on the bug reports of 125 quantum
software projects. We observe that quantum software projects are more buggy
than classical software projects and that quantum project bugs are more costly
to fix than classical project bugs. We also identify the types of the bugs and
the quantum programming components where they occurred. Our study shows that
the bugs are spread across different components, but quantum-specific bugs
particularly appear in the compiler, gate operation, and state preparation
components. The three most occurring types of bugs are Program anomaly bugs,
Configuration bugs, and Data type and structure bugs. Our study highlights some
particularly challenging areas in quantum software development, such as the
lack of scientific quantum computation libraries that implement comprehensive
mathematical functions for quantum computing. Quantum developers also seek
specialized data manipulation libraries for quantum software engineering like
Numpy for quantum computing. Our findings also provide insights for future work
to advance the quantum program development, testing, and debugging of quantum
software, such as providing tooling support for debugging low-level circuits. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2204.11965 |