|
Comments
Did you read today's front page stories & breaking news?
SYS-CON.TV
|
Features Stretching 2009 Budgets Using Open Source
Hybrid software development is producing results
By: Eran Strod
Mar. 9, 2009 10:30 AM
With a global recession looming, software development managers are being asked to slash resource budgets in 2009 while maintaining schedules. When you need to deliver more features with fewer coding resources, there is only one answer: hybrid development. Hybrid software development involves the combination of internally developed code with external code from vendors, partners, and, especially, the open source community. Stretching the Budget, Improving Productivity
Managing Risk The introduction of an external component into a project needs to be managed as an integrated set of business processes involving software developers in partnership with purchasing, IT, security, legal, product management, the technology office, the open source review board, and any other internal groups that have a stake in the policy administration of software. This is important, because engineering can potentially produce functional code that is dysfunctional from a business and compliance perspective. In a recent survey on Black Duck Software's code search site, Koders.com, we found that only 52% of respondents work in organizations that have policies for managing open source code. Only 14% of respondents have instituted automation to support these policies; the rest have manual process or no processes at all. Manual processes are better than nothing, but they place a heavy burden on developers, have difficulty scaling and reduce organizational agility. In one major software company, developers must fill out a 10-page form and make a presentation before a review board in order to use open source code. In others, developers spend about 5% of their time polling Internet sites for code patches and monitoring industry forums and security sites to learn about security vulnerabilities. We talk to many organizations that use manual code reviews to determine the origin of code, which is essential to the task of auditing code licenses. The audit typically stops development and engineers gather in a conference room and sift through perhaps millions of lines of code. In this type of scenario, the organization often has to be content with 10-15% code coverage, leaving a great risk of potential undiscovered issues. Compliance with applicable open source license requirements is key to avoiding costly and time-consuming litigation. Once a theoretical matter, open source licenses are starting to be tested in the courts. The Software Freedom Law Center has been reported to conduct 50 legal actions per year and has recently filed several lawsuits against alleged violators of open source licenses. A recent U.S. Federal Appeals court decision in the Jacobsen v. Katzer case determined that Katzer had improperly used open source and was liable for copyright infringement as well as breach of contract. Assuming the fines imposed in these disputes are a tolerable business risk, the prospect of facing a court injunction against shipping product probably is not. In addition, the publicity surrounding today's open source issues can threaten the reputation and relationships of the companies involved. Automating Hybrid Software Development Automated systems can provide transparency to management and can service a globally distributed and agile workforce. It's not uncommon for engineers to inherit a code base that was created by a now disbanded or unavailable group. An automated system provides the institutional memory needed to pick up a project from a policy perspective. It documents the bill-of-materials of a code base and tracks policy dialogue and approvals so that a new team can quickly pick up where the old one left off. An automated systems can provide:
With automation, hybrid software development becomes faster and more cost-effective, workflow is optimized, and security and policy integrity can be standardized enterprise-wide. Conclusion Reader Feedback: Page 1 of 1
SOA World Latest Stories
Subscribe to the World's Most Powerful Newsletters
Subscribe to Our Rss Feeds & Get Your SYS-CON News Live!
|
SYS-CON Featured Whitepapers
Most Read This Week |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||