http://www.theregister.co.uk/2008/12/05/green_hills_integrity_spinout/ By Timothy Prickett Morgan The Register 5th December 2008 The military has always had better security than we can get on our computers, and Green Hills Software, a provider of a real-time, secure operating system called Integrity, wants to change that. To that end, the company has spun its Integrity operating system into a wholly owned subsidiary called Integrity Global Security and has set it loose with the job of becoming a kind of security abstraction layer for Windows, Linux, and Solaris guest operating systems on x64 iron. David Chandler, who was vice president of sales of Green Hills and helped push the company up above $100m in sales, has been tapped as chief executive officer of the new unit, which is going to try to take Integrity mainstream. Thus far, Integrity has been used mainly in embedded systems and usually in military equipment. Chandler concedes that Green Hills came late to the embedded systems market, but with more than $100m in sales and profits to boot, the company is doing as well as its peers, who do not generally focus on security as their driving theme. Green Hills was founded in 1982 by Dan O'Dowd, but didn't get into the operating system business for the embedded market until the mid-1990s. The Integrity operating system was announced in 1997 and was significant at the time because it allowed multiple applications to run in a secure and predicable way on a single processor because its "secure separation architecture" was created from the ground up to guarantee specific CPU resources to multiple applications and to rank which applications get priority over others. This is kind of important in a weapons system, which is why Lockheed Martin chose the Integrity real-time OS for use in America's B1-B bomber. The software is in use today in the F-16, F-22, and F-35 fighters deployed by the American military and is also used in the new Airbus 380 and Boeing 787 commercial aircraft. The Integrity OS runs on x86/x64, ARM, and PowerPC processors and has a POSIX interface, which allows Unix apps to run on it. Integrity has its own native interface as well. The Integrity OS is the first - and according to Chandler, the only - operating system to be certified at the EAL 6+ security level by the Common Criteria security rankings. "Integrity is for environments where you expect hostile, repeated attempts to breach security," explains Chandler. (You can see the Common Criteria certifications here [1] for all kinds of software and appliances). [1] http://www.niap-ccevs.org/cc-scheme/in_evaluation/ [...] _______________________________________________ Help InfoSecNews.org with a donation! http://www.infosecnews.org/donate.htmlReceived on Thu Dec 04 2008 - 22:31:55 PST
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