Security research suggests Linux has fewer flaws
Published: December 13, 2004, 5:57 PM PST
By Robert Lemos
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
http://news.com.com/Security+research+suggests+Linux+has+fewer+flaws/2100-10
02_3-5489804.html?part=rss&tag=5489804&subj=news.1002.20

The Linux operating system has many times fewer bugs than typical commercial
software, according to an upcoming report.

The conclusion is the result of a four-year research project conducted by
code-analysis company Coverity, which plans to release its report on
Tuesday. The project found 985 bugs in the 5.7 million lines of code that
make up the latest version of the Linux core operating system, or kernel. A
typical commercial program of similar size usually has more than 5,000 flaws
or defects, according to data from Carnegie Mellon University.

"Linux is a very good system in terms of bug density," said Seth Hallem, CEO
of Coverity, a San Francisco company that makes flaw-detection tools for
software written in C and C++ programming languages.

Code-analysis tools typically use software-design principles to analyze a
program's source code and flag any possible problems. Microsoft already uses
such tools widely in its internal development, and many compilers are
starting to include rudimentary versions of the programs as well. The tools
are also being used to tame the wild coding prevalent around the Web.

Though Coverity does not have any data about the relative frequency of flaws
in Microsoft's Windows operating system, the latest data will likely feed
the debate between the various proponents of Linux, Mac OS X and Windows
over which operating system is more secure.

A recent report, for example, found that Red Hat Linux had fewer critical
flaws than Microsoft Windows. Another research paper, conducted by Forrester
Research and sponsored by Microsoft, unsurprisingly favored Windows.

Coverity has not analyzed the source code to Microsoft Windows because the
company does not have access to the source code, Hallem said. Apple
Computer's Mac OS X has a great deal of proprietary programming, but the
core of the operating system is based on BSD, an open-source operating
system similar to Linux.

Hallem stressed that the research on Linux--specifically, version 2.6 of the
kernel--indicated that the open-source development process produced a secure
operating system.

"There are other public reports that describe the bug density of Windows,
and I would say that Linux is comparable or better than Windows," he said.

A representative of Microsoft could not immediately comment on the Coverity
study.

The research suggests that the Linux kernel scored better than
run-of-the-mill commercial code. Proprietary software, in general, has 1 to
7 flaws per thousand lines of code, according to an April report from the
National Cybersecurity Partnership's Working Group on the Software
Lifecycle, which cited an analysis of development methods by the Software
Engineering Institute at Carnegie Mellon University.

For a 5.7 million-line program, such as version 2.6 of the Linux kernel,
that roughly adds up to between 5,700 and 40,000 flaws.

Microsoft uses analysis tools similar to those in Coverity's study to vet
its Windows code. One tool, known as PREfast, runs on each developer's
workstation to check code for simple problems. The other tool, PREfix, is
run every night on the Windows source code to catch more complex issues.

Coverity's Hallem acknowledged that by running similar tools to its own,
Microsoft likely had reduced the number of defects in Windows.

Coverity plans to provide regular bug analysis reports on Linux and make a
summary of the results available to the Linux developer community.





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