What About Our Bug? A Study on the Responsiveness of NPM Package Maintainers

November 07, 2025 Β· Declared Dead Β· πŸ› International Symposium on Empirical Software Engineering and Measurement

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Authors Mohammadreza Saeidi, Ethan Thoma, Raula Gaikovina Kula, Gema RodrΓ­guez-PΓ©rez arXiv ID 2511.04986 Category cs.SE: Software Engineering Citations 1 Venue International Symposium on Empirical Software Engineering and Measurement Last Checked 4 months ago
Abstract
Background: Widespread use of third-party libraries makes ecosystems like Node Package Manager (npm) critical to modern software development. However, this interconnected chain of dependencies also creates challenges: bugs in one library can propagate downstream, potentially impacting many other libraries that rely on it. We hypothesize that maintainers may not always decide to fix a bug, especially if the maintainer decides it falls out of their responsibility within the chain of dependencies. Aims: To confirm this hypothesis, we investigate the responsiveness of 30,340 bug reports across 500 of the most depended-upon npm packages. Method: We adopt a mixed-method approach to mine repository issue data and perform qualitative open coding to analyze reasons behind unaddressed bug reports. Results: Our findings show that maintainers are generally responsive, with a median project-level responsiveness of 70% (IQR: 55%-89%), reflecting their commitment to support downstream developers. Conclusions: We present a taxonomy of the reasons some bugs remain unresolved. The taxonomy includes contribution practices, dependency constraints, and library-specific standards as reasons for not being responsive. Understanding maintainer behavior can inform practices that promote a more robust and responsive open-source ecosystem that benefits the entire community.
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