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Testing with AI Agents: An Empirical Study of Test Generation Frequency, Quality, and Coverage

Suzuka Yoshimoto, Shun Fujita, Kosei Horikawa, Daniel Feitosa, Yutaro Kashiwa, Hajimu Iida

Abstract

Agent-based coding tools have transformed software development practices. Unlike prompt-based approaches that require developers to manually integrate generated code, these agent-based tools autonomously interact with repositories to create, modify, and execute code, including test generation. While many developers have adopted agent-based coding tools, little is known about how these tools generate tests in real-world development scenarios or how AI-generated tests compare to human-written ones. This study presents an empirical analysis of test generation by agent-based coding tools using the AIDev dataset. We extracted 2,232 commits containing test-related changes and investigated three aspects: the frequency of test additions, the structural characteristics of the generated tests, and their impact on code coverage. Our findings reveal that (i) AI authored 16.4% of all commits adding tests in real-world repositories, (ii) AI-generated test methods exhibit distinct structural patterns, featuring longer code and a higher density of assertions while maintaining lower cyclomatic complexity through linear logic, and (iii) AI-generated tests contribute to code coverage comparable to human-written tests, frequently achieving positive coverage gains across several projects.

Testing with AI Agents: An Empirical Study of Test Generation Frequency, Quality, and Coverage

Abstract

Agent-based coding tools have transformed software development practices. Unlike prompt-based approaches that require developers to manually integrate generated code, these agent-based tools autonomously interact with repositories to create, modify, and execute code, including test generation. While many developers have adopted agent-based coding tools, little is known about how these tools generate tests in real-world development scenarios or how AI-generated tests compare to human-written ones. This study presents an empirical analysis of test generation by agent-based coding tools using the AIDev dataset. We extracted 2,232 commits containing test-related changes and investigated three aspects: the frequency of test additions, the structural characteristics of the generated tests, and their impact on code coverage. Our findings reveal that (i) AI authored 16.4% of all commits adding tests in real-world repositories, (ii) AI-generated test methods exhibit distinct structural patterns, featuring longer code and a higher density of assertions while maintaining lower cyclomatic complexity through linear logic, and (iii) AI-generated tests contribute to code coverage comparable to human-written tests, frequently achieving positive coverage gains across several projects.
Paper Structure (5 sections, 2 figures, 2 tables)

This paper contains 5 sections, 2 figures, 2 tables.

Figures (2)

  • Figure 1: Comparison of Metrics: Human vs. AI Agents
  • Figure 2: t-SNE Visualization of CodeBERT Embeddings.