The Bones of the System: A Case Study of Logging and Telemetry at Microsoft
Our full paper, The Bones of the System: A Case Study of Logging and Telemetry at Microsoft, has been accepted to the International Conference on Software Engineering, Software Engineering in Practice Track (ICSE SEIP 2016). ICSE is hosted this year in Austin, Texas. The abstract of the paper follows:
Large software organizations are transitioning to event data platforms as they culturally shift to better support data-driven decision making. This paper offers a case study at Microsoft during such a transition. Through qualitative interviews of 28 participants, and a quantitative survey of 1,823 respondents, we catalog a diverse set of activities that leverage event data sources, identify challenges in conducting these activities, and describe tensions that emerge in data-driven cultures as event data flow through these activities within the organization. We find that the use of event data span every job role in our interviews and survey, that different perspectives on event data create tensions between roles or teams, and that professionals report social and technical challenges across activities.
I am delighted to have been able to collaborate with Microsoft Research for this study. Thanks to Robert DeLine, Steven Drucker, and Danyel Fisher, the co-authors of the paper.