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Developer

IT Department / Developers

IT Department / Developers

Development staff within the firms Information Technology (IT) departments are responsible for designing, coding, and testing software applications.

They are responsible for writing and maintaining code, troubleshooting and debugging software, and working with other developers to create and implement software solutions.

Objectives

  • Infrastructure Management
  • Security / Data Protection
  • System development and integration
  • Technical Support
  • Business Continuity / Disaster Recovery
  • Digital Transformation
  • Vendor Management

Challenges

  • Evaluating open source solutions to determine their suitability for business needs
  • Integrating open source into the organisation's infrastructure
  • Cost control
  • Complexity Control

Internal Stakeholders

Open Source Engagement

A developer interacts with open source software by using open source libraries, frameworks, and tools as building blocks for their software. They also contribute to open-source projects, fixing bugs, adding features, and submitting pull requests.

IT Departments are likely to be managing their estate atop large deployments of open source software.

Calls To Action

tbd.

Expected Activities

Using Open Source Software

Using open source software within a financial services organisation poses unique challenges. This article outlines some of the potential pitfalls and solutions when getting started.

Software Inventory

Software inventory is a precondition to most of the activities involved in OSMM level 2. The first step to licence compliance or supply chain security is to understand what software is in your estate.

License Compliance Management

There are several key points that a large enterprise should consider to ensure compliance with open-source license obligations:

Maintaining An Open Source Project

We currently live in a world where OSS is everywhere, consumable, helpful and can make a positive or negative outcome on the programs we rely on. Strong open source projects can lessen technical debt, increase reusability and discoverability. For the purpose of this guide, we will cover some key principles and practices for managing your open source project effectively.

Open Source Supply Chain Security

In this article we are going to look at the growing issue of software supply chain attacks via some examples and then look at the emerging field of open source supply chain security: what it is, current best practices, the institutional landscape and emerging legislation.

Open Source Foundations

This article describes the importance of interacting with open source foundations, the roles they perform and ways in which your organisation can make the most of them.

Incubating With An Open Source Foundation

Incubating an open source project within a foundation offers numerous benefits which includes increased visibility, community support, and access to resources that can propel your project to new heights.

Open Source Consumption Training

This guide is intended to help OSPOs of all maturity levels build an open source training course that is created with purpose to deliver impact. Whether your OSPO recently launched or is looking into re-doing the firms open source training, this guide will provide ideas and content that can be implemented to a comprehensive open source training course.

Building an Open Source Culture

When people think about open source, most often they think about the engineering aspects: contributing or consuming code. But community and culture are a central part of the open source world and should not be overlooked.

Community Orientation

This course is for everyone involved or looking to become involved in open source software communities.

Developing Secure Software

Learn the security basics to develop software that is hardened against attacks, and understand how you can reduce the damage and speed the response when a vulnerability is exploited. Thanks to the involvement of OpenSSF, a cross-industry collaboration that brings together leaders to improve the security of open source software by building a broader community, targeted initiatives, and best practices, this course provides specific tips on how to use and develop open source and other software securely.

Open Source Development Practices

This module covers open source best practices for development and governance. This content resides within the ‘Strategy & Governance’ section of the open source framework. These elements provide developers a common understanding of important development practices in all areas of open source. Being able to effectively utilize these concepts gives learners the foundation to develop, test, and participate in the open source software community.

Collaborating Effectively With Open Source Projects

This module covers important topics for working most effectively with upstream open source projects. This content resides within the ‘Contribute’ section of the open source framework. Understanding these concepts is critical for developers, as these form the basis for productive and streamlined work with open source projects. Being able to effectively utilize these concepts gives developers & engineering managers the necessary background and information to not only get the most value from their open source engagement but also to understand how to effectively work with upstream open source projects.

Further Reading

tbd.