Black Duck Software Busts Myths About Application Development.KnowledgeBase of Open Source code mined from nearly 4,000 websites sheds light on OS projects and community WALTHAM, Mass. -- Beyond user surveys, there is little actual data on the dynamic open source software industry. As a result, some inaccuracies have prevailed, including the belief that open source developers have created only a few billion lines of code The statements and instructions that a programmer writes when creating a program. One line of this "source code" may generate one machine instruction or several depending on the programming language. A line of code in assembly language is typically turned into one machine instruction. . Today, Black Duck Software released research based on the Black Duck KnowledgeBase that dispels this and other common "myths"--five in all--about open source in application development. These findings were derived from actual analysis of open source software rather than just user perception. Black Duck Software actively spiders the Internet collecting downloadable code into a giant repository which is known to Black Duck customers as the KnowledgeBase. This core information repository An information repository is an easy to deploy secondary tier of data storage that can comprise multiple, networked data storage technologies running on diverse operating systems, where data that no longer needs to be in primary storage is protected, classified according to captured contains more than 170,000 open source projects from nearly 4,000 unique web sites. It is the largest collection of open source software in the industry. Black Duck mines this valuable resource for information about the development of the open source industry. Black Duck's recent findings dispel the following misconceptions about open source software (OSS Oss (ôs), city (1994 pop. 62,141), North Brabant prov., S Netherlands; chartered 1399. It is a significant industrial center. Manufactures include meat products, chemicals, pharmaceuticals, electrical equipment, and metalware. ) in application development: * Myth: Open Source is just source code Source code is actually only 15% of what is released by open source developers. There are four times as many binary files as source files in open source releases. In addition to binaries, open source projects are packaged with scripts, markup language markup language Standard text-encoding system consisting of a set of symbols inserted in a text document to control its structure, formatting, or the relationship among its parts. The most widely used markup languages are SGML, HTML, and XML. files, graphics images, documentation and many other artifacts artifacts see specimen artifacts. . * Myth: Open Source adoption is mostly application infrastructure There is a tendency to focus on adoption of monolithic applications in IT infrastructure, for example, Linux or MySQL. The Black Duck KnowledgeBase shows that the open source world is dominated by components, not fully formed applications, and these are being reused from project to project in hundreds and even thousands of instances. One example, Apache Log4j is reused by over 5500 projects. Java developers, in particular, have taken tremendous advantage of code reuse Code reuse, also called software reuse, is the use of existing software, or software knowledge, to build new software. Ad hoc reuse has been practiced from the earliest days of programming. Programmers have always reused sections of code, templates, functions, and procedures. . There are 14 times more files distributed ending in the .class file suffix (binaries) than .java (source files). A major reason is that Java components are built once and reused and redistributed by many other projects in binary form Binary form is a way of structuring a piece of music into two related sections, both of which are usually repeated. Note that Binary is also a structure used to choreograph dance. . * Myth: There are a few billion lines of code out there This figure is an order of magnitude A change in quantity or volume as measured by the decimal point. For example, from tens to hundreds is one order of magnitude. Tens to thousands is two orders of magnitude; tens to millions is three orders of magnitude, etc. too low. There are tens of billions of lines of open source code available on the Internet. In addition, twenty-three percent of all downloadable code was released or renewed in 2008. Over 90% of open source code is written in the major languages: C, C++, Java, Javascript and C#, however, dozens of languages are used. * Myth: Real programmers do NOT comment Open source developers create about one comment line for every four lines of source code. The most commented programming language is Java with more than one comment line for every two lines of code. The least commented language is Boo; a python-inspired programming language that operates within the .net framework. * Myth: GPL See GNU General Public License. 1. GPL - General Purpose Language. 2. GPL - ["A Sample Management Application Program in a Graphical Data-driven Programming language", A.L. Davis et al, Digest of Papers, Compcon Spring 81, Feb 1981, pp. 162-167]. Version 3 is being ignored First released in June 2007, GPL version 3 has grown from zero to over 6,300 projects. In terms of project adoption, it has surpassed the CPL, Mozilla, MIT MIT - Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Apache licenses. GPLv3 is now the fifth most chosen license in the open source community and if the current trend continues, it will surpass BSD (Berkeley Software Distribution) The software distribution facility of the Computer Systems Research Group (CSRG) of the University of California at Berkeley. for the number four spot in a year or two. About 70% of all open source projects use a variant of the GPL license. For further information about GPL version 3 adoption, please visit the Open Source Resource Center (www.blackducksoftware.com/oss) on the Black Duck website. Graphics that illustrate the data outlined in this release can be found at http://www.blackducksoftware.com/news/releases/2008-12-09#images. Black Duck's KnowledgeBase is fundamental to our enterprise productivity solutions that streamline hybrid development, an approach which safely and effectively combines homegrown, open source and other third-party code. Black Duck regularly sends KnowledgeBase updates to customers via the Internet. Our enterprise solutions help application developers manage code usage including finding code to reuse, monitoring security vulnerabilities, automating the code approval process and validating that no unapproved un·ap·proved adj. Not approved or sanctioned: an unapproved vaccine; an unapproved protest march. code has leaked into a code base. This enables software development organizations to reap time-to-market benefits and cost reductions by reusing open source software while effectively managing security, licensing, export control and other issues associated with open source and other forms of external software. About Black Duck Software Black Duck Software is the leading global provider of products and services for accelerating software development through the managed use of open source and third-party code. Black Duck[TM] enables companies to shorten time-to-market and reduce development and maintenance costs while mitigating the risks and challenges associated with open source reuse, including hidden license obligations, security vulnerabilities, unsupported open source and version proliferation. The company is headquartered near Boston and has offices in San Francisco San Francisco (săn frănsĭs`kō), city (1990 pop. 723,959), coextensive with San Francisco co., W Calif., on the tip of a peninsula between the Pacific Ocean and San Francisco Bay, which are connected by the strait known as the Golden , Amsterdam and Hong Kong Hong Kong (hŏng kŏng), Mandarin Xianggang, special administrative region of China, formerly a British crown colony (2005 est. pop. 6,899,000), land area 422 sq mi (1,092 sq km), adjacent to Guangdong prov. , as well as distribution partners throughout the world. For more information, visit www.blackducksoftware.com. Black Duck, Know Your Code and the Black Duck logo are registered trademarks of Black Duck Software, Inc. in the United States and other jurisdictions. Koders is a trademark of Black Duck Software, Inc. All other trademarks are the property of their respective holders. |
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