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BKSECCOD.RVW
20030902
"Secure
Coding", Mark G. Graff/Kenneth R. van Wyk, 2003,
0-596-00242-4, U$29.95/C$46.95
%A Mark G. Graff
%A Kenneth R. van Wyk
%C 103 Morris Street, Suite A, Sebastopol, CA 95472
%D 2003
%G 0-596-00242-4
%I O'Reilly & Associates, Inc.
%O U$29.95/C$46.95 800-998-9938 fax: 707-829-0104 nuts@ora.com
%O http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0596002424/robsladesinterne
http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/0596002424/robsladesinte-21
%O http://www.amazon.ca/exec/obidos/ASIN/0596002424/robsladesin03-20
%P 224 p.
%T "Secure Coding: Principles and Practices" |
Recent
events have demonstrated that we are badly in need
of guidance
in the matter of the construction of secure software
(or the safe
fabrication of code). This book covers a topic that is
very
necessary. Unfortunately, the work is insufficient to
the task.
Chapter
one provides us with the all-too-common information
that
attacks happen, and that there are bugs in software,
but at least the
writing style is thought-provoking. At times the material
is also
bemusing, as in the beginning of chapter two, which proposes
that code
be "just secure enough"--even though the end
of the previous chapter
pointed out that premise as one of the problems of software
quality.
We are given thirty principles of secure architecture
(the first one
of which has at least seventeen sub-points), and while
all of them are
good, they are both too many to serve as a convenient
guide, and still
not exhaustive of the possible problems. (Number thirty
tacitly
admits this, asking "what did I forget?") There
are some examples
that provide a limited amount of practical advice on
design, in
chapter three, but much of the content is abstract and
vague. It is
hard to find a structure or thread through the material,
which seems
to be a miscellaneous collection of security topics such
as risk
management. Chapter four dispenses good suggestions about
implementation, but the text hardly constitutes any kind
of failsafe
process for building software. Operations, in chapter
five, seems to
be basically a review of all aspects of security. Chapter
six starts
out by bemoaning the fact that so much of testing is
done on an ad hoc
basis, without structure and process. This is quite ironic,
in view
of the fact that the book can fairly be described as
ad hoc, too.
While
the advice given in the text is useful and good, it
is also
generally well-known, and often unsupported by material
in regard to
how the recommended outcomes might be accomplished. This
is certainly
a rallying cry for what we need to do, but doesn't necessarily
move us
closer to actually doing it.
copyright Robert M. Slade, 2003 BKSECCOD.RVW 20030902
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