Linux Leads in Open Source Quality, but Risky Defects Lurk
Government Computer News (05/11/13) Paul McCloskey

Linux topped open source software in quality in a study of the defects that occur in the software 
development process.  For more than seven years, Coverity Scan Service analyzed 850 million lines 
of code from more than 300 open source projects, including those written in Linux, PHP, and Apache. 
 Using a measure of defects per 1,000 lines of code, the study found that Linux consistently 
recorded defect densities of less than 1.0, with versions scanned between 2011 and 2012 having 
defect rates below 0.7.  The study also found that high-risk defects were prevalent in the software 
development process, with 36 percent of defects classified as a "threat to overall software 
quality and security if undetected."  The most common high-risk defects included memory 
corruption, illegal memory access, and resource leaks, which the study's report says are "all 
difficult to detect without automated code analysis."  The study also found that the average 
quality of open source software was virtually equal to that of proprietary software.
http://gcn.com/blogs/pulse/2013/05/linux-leads-in-open-source-quality-but-risky-defects-lurk.aspx
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