The quality and security levels of open source code are continuing to improve, according to the latest annual audit by code analysis tools vendor Coverity.. The third edition of the Coverity Scan Open Source report measured a 16 per cent reduction in static analysis defect density over the past three years among the projects subjected to scrutiny, including Firefox, Linux, PHP, Ruby and Samba. The report covers analysis of more than 11 billion lines of code from 280 open source projects. Beween 2006 and 2009, more than 11,200 defects in open source programs have been fixed thanks to Coverity - 2, 700 of those in the last year. The link for this article located at The Register is no longer available. . The latest release of the Coverity Scan Open Source report reported a 16 percent decline in the density of static analysis defects.. Code Quality Improvement, Defect Density, Open Source Projects. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
The work is part of a U.S. government-backed project to harden open-source code. "We applaud the developers responsible for the 11 open-source projects that have advanced to the second rung of code security and quality," said David Maxwell, open-source strategist for Coverity. The Open Source Hardening Project, sponsored by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, uses Coverity's Scan, which grades projects on a "ladder" according to their progress at fixing and preventing flaws. This article talks about the Open Source Hardening Project which was started in January 2006. It discuses the current plans for helping open source security.. The link for this article located at Cnet is no longer available. . Explore the Open Source Security Enhancement Initiative aimed at enhancing safety in publicly available software, reinforcing the integrity of community projects. Open Source Hardening Project, Code Security, Software Quality. . Bill Locke
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