Trimming Mobile Applications for Bandwidth-Challenged Networks in Developing Regions
December 03, 2019 Β· Declared Dead Β· π IEEE Transactions on Mobile Computing
"No code URL or promise found in abstract"
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Authors
Qinge Xie, Qingyuan Gong, Xinlei He, Yang Chen, Xin Wang, Haitao Zheng, Ben Y. Zhao
arXiv ID
1912.01328
Category
cs.SE: Software Engineering
Cross-listed
eess.SY
Citations
10
Venue
IEEE Transactions on Mobile Computing
Last Checked
4 months ago
Abstract
Despite continuous efforts to build and update network infrastructure, mobile devices in developing regions continue to be constrained by limited bandwidth. Unfortunately, this coincides with a period of unprecedented growth in the size of mobile applications. Thus it is becoming prohibitively expensive for users in developing regions to download and update mobile apps critical to their economic and educational development. Unchecked, these trends can further contribute to a large and growing global digital divide. Our goal is to better understand the source of this rapid growth in mobile app code size, whether it is reflective of new functionality, and identify steps that can be taken to make existing mobile apps more friendly bandwidth constrained mobile networks. We hypothesize that much of this growth in mobile apps is due to poor resource/code management, and do not reflect proportional increases in functionality. Our hypothesis is partially validated by mini-programs, apps with extremely small footprints gaining popularity in Chinese mobile networks. Here, we use functionally equivalent pairs of mini-programs and Android apps to identify potential sources of "bloat," inefficient uses of code or resources that contribute to large package sizes. We analyze a large sample of popular Android apps and quantify instances of code and resource bloat. We develop techniques for automated code and resource trimming, and successfully validate them on a large set of Android apps. We hope our results will lead to continued efforts to streamline mobile apps, making them easier to access and maintain for users in developing regions.
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