OUDS iOS

Projects that follow the best practices below can voluntarily self-certify and show that they've achieved an Open Source Security Foundation (OpenSSF) best practices badge.

If this is your project, please show your badge status on your project page! The badge status looks like this: Badge level for project 10674 is silver Here is how to embed it:

These are the Gold level criteria. You can also view the Passing or Silver level criteria.

        

 Basics 5/5

  • Identification

    A Swift Package of SwiftUI components library for Orange Unified Design System

  • Prerequisites


    The project MUST achieve a silver level badge. [achieve_silver]

  • Project oversight


    Mradi LAZIMA uwe na "bus factor" ya 2 au zaidi. (URL required) [bus_factor]

    2 developers full time (maintainers) 1 developer with iOS skills (who worked a bit on this library) is on another library but can help thanks to documentation 1 developer with iOS skills can be eaisly onboarded thanks to documentation and other developers, and knows the team

    So bus factor >= 2

    See https://github.com/Orange-OpenSource/ouds-ios/blob/develop/.github/CONTRIBUTORS.txt



    Mradi LAZIMA uwe na angalau wachangiaji wawili wasiohusika. (URL required) [contributors_unassociated]
  • Other


    The project MUST include a license statement in each source file. This MAY be done by including the following inside a comment near the beginning of each file: SPDX-License-Identifier: [SPDX license expression for project]. [license_per_file]

    Source files contain headers with SPDX fields, the formatter add them in the lib and the Xcode project of the demo app too


  • Public version-controlled source repository


    The project's source repository MUST use a common distributed version control software (e.g., git or mercurial). [repo_distributed]

    Repository on GitHub, which uses git. git is distributed.



    The project MUST clearly identify small tasks that can be performed by new or casual contributors. (URL required) [small_tasks]

    The project MUST require two-factor authentication (2FA) for developers for changing a central repository or accessing sensitive data (such as private vulnerability reports). This 2FA mechanism MAY use mechanisms without cryptographic mechanisms such as SMS, though that is not recommended. [require_2FA]

    2FA will be forced at organization level in a near future. We do not manage sensitive data. Any destructive action should need confimations with 2FA by GitHub (mails, SMS, app) Such things are not that much configurable on GitHub side. Orange does not provide GitHub account to users so cannot force them to use 2FA. To the best of our knowledge GitHub does not provide such tools as required in this section. Destructive actions on the repository is controlled by short-list of organizations admins with 2FA enabled.



    The project's two-factor authentication (2FA) SHOULD use cryptographic mechanisms to prevent impersonation. Short Message Service (SMS) based 2FA, by itself, does NOT meet this criterion, since it is not encrypted. [secure_2FA]

    Orange does not provide GitHub account to users so cannot force them to use 2FA. To the best of our knowledge GitHub does not provide such tools as required in this section: 2FA can be used but we are not able to force rules (like passkeys or PKI). To the best of our knowledge GitHub does not provide such tools as required in this section.


  • Coding standards


    Mradi LAZIMA uandike mahitaji yake ya kukagua msimbo, pamoja na jinsi ukaguzi wa nambari unafanywa, nini lazima ichunguzwe, na nini kinachohitajika ili ikubalike. (URL required) [code_review_standards]

    The project MUST have at least 50% of all proposed modifications reviewed before release by a person other than the author, to determine if it is a worthwhile modification and free of known issues which would argue against its inclusion [two_person_review]

    Reviews are done by codeowners and rules have been defined to not enable merge if the last commiter is the reviewer


  • Working build system


    The project MUST have a reproducible build. If no building occurs (e.g., scripting languages where the source code is used directly instead of being compiled), select "not applicable" (N/A). (URL required) [build_reproducible]

    Any dependencies are frozen in locks. Sources are compiled, not binairies are embeded. We deliver sources, not binairies, and each release contains the sources and all details to build (see https://github.com/Orange-OpenSource/ouds-ios/releases)


  • Automated test suite


    A test suite MUST be invocable in a standard way for that language. (URL required) [test_invocation]

    It is, and the tests can be run using Xcode as IDE or CLI as we done in our CI/CD See https://github.com/Orange-OpenSource/ouds-ios/blob/develop/.github/DEVELOP.md#run-tests



    The project MUST implement continuous integration, where new or changed code is frequently integrated into a central code repository and automated tests are run on the result. (URL required) [test_continuous_integration]

    We use GitHub Actions in CI/CD in the same repositories. The workflows run linter, formatter, build, etsts, look for dead code, look for secrets leaks. See https://github.com/Orange-OpenSource/ouds-ios/tree/develop/.github/workflows



    The project MUST have FLOSS automated test suite(s) that provide at least 90% statement coverage if there is at least one FLOSS tool that can measure this criterion in the selected language. [test_statement_coverage90]

    N/A because even if we have thousands of unit tests code coverage is not enough and we cannot cover big parts of the sources as they are SwiftUI graphical components and tested in the demo app.



    The project MUST have FLOSS automated test suite(s) that provide at least 80% branch coverage if there is at least one FLOSS tool that can measure this criterion in the selected language. [test_branch_coverage80]

    N/A because even if we have thousands of unit tests code coverage is not enough and we cannot cover big parts of the sources as they are SwiftUI graphical components and tested in the demo app.


  • Use basic good cryptographic practices

    Note that some software does not need to use cryptographic mechanisms. If your project produces software that (1) includes, activates, or enables encryption functionality, and (2) might be released from the United States (US) to outside the US or to a non-US-citizen, you may be legally required to take a few extra steps. Typically this just involves sending an email. For more information, see the encryption section of Understanding Open Source Technology & US Export Controls.

    The software produced by the project MUST support secure protocols for all of its network communications, such as SSHv2 or later, TLS1.2 or later (HTTPS), IPsec, SFTP, and SNMPv3. Insecure protocols such as FTP, HTTP, telnet, SSLv3 or earlier, and SSHv1 MUST be disabled by default, and only enabled if the user specifically configures it. If the software produced by the project does not support network communications, select "not applicable" (N/A). [crypto_used_network]

    No cryto in use nor network connections



    The software produced by the project MUST, if it supports or uses TLS, support at least TLS version 1.2. Note that the predecessor of TLS was called SSL. If the software does not use TLS, select "not applicable" (N/A). [crypto_tls12]

    No cryto in use nor network connections


  • Secured delivery against man-in-the-middle (MITM) attacks


    The project website, repository (if accessible via the web), and download site (if separate) MUST include key hardening headers with nonpermissive values. (URL required) [hardened_site]

    We suppose GitHub does the job and Orange DNS team too. Documentation at https://ios.unified-design-system.orange.com/ for example is generated Domain named is protected in GitHub organization side and Orange side We cannot define such headers for GitHub repo and docs, anything hosted and delegated to GitHub. // X-Content-Type-Options was not set to "nosniff". Required security hardening headers missing: https://ios.unified-design-system.orange.com: content-security-policy, strict-transport-security, x-content-type-options, x-frame-options


  • Other security issues


    The project MUST have performed a security review within the last 5 years. This review MUST consider the security requirements and security boundary. [security_review]

    Gitleaks, SBOM and check of SBOM, Dependabot, Renovate are still in use. Commits are "verified" by GitHub Project is to young and not mature enough to have security audits since last 5 years but no secrets nor networks connections, only dumb UI lib today.



    Hardening mechanisms MUST be used in the software produced by the project so that software defects are less likely to result in security vulnerabilities. (URL required) [hardening]

    N/A here in fact


  • Dynamic code analysis


    The project MUST apply at least one dynamic analysis tool to any proposed major production release of the software produced by the project before its release. [dynamic_analysis]

    Not found such tool yet, but we make static analysis



    The project SHOULD include many run-time assertions in the software it produces and check those assertions during dynamic analysis. [dynamic_analysis_enable_assertions]

    Not found such tool yet, but we make static analysis



This data is available under the Community Data License Agreement – Permissive, Version 2.0 (CDLA-Permissive-2.0). This means that a Data Recipient may share the Data, with or without modifications, so long as the Data Recipient makes available the text of this agreement with the shared Data. Please credit Pierre-Yves Lapersonne and the OpenSSF Best Practices badge contributors.

Project badge entry owned by: Pierre-Yves Lapersonne.
Entry created on 2025-05-30 15:52:03 UTC, last updated on 2025-05-31 15:07:15 UTC. Last achieved passing badge on 2025-05-30 16:34:34 UTC.

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