The QBF Gallery 2014 was a competitive evaluation for QBF solvers organized as part of the FLoC 2014 Olympic Games during the Vienna Summer of Logic. The QBF Gallery 2014 featured three different tracks on formulas in prenex conjunctive normal form (PCNF) including more than 1200 formulas to be solved. Gold, silver, and bronze track medals were awarded to the solvers that solved the most formulas in each of the three tracks. Additionally, the three participants that were most successful over the complete benchmark set were awarded with Kurt Gödel medals, the official prizes of the FLoC 2014 Olympic Games. In this paper, we give an overview of the setup and rules of the competition, briefly review the participating solvers, and finally report on the results of the QBF Gallery 2014.
List of Tables Table 1: Count of Java Guidelines, as Applicable to Android 2
AbstractThis report describes Android secure coding rules, guidelines, and static analysis that were developed as part of the Mobile Source Code Analysis Laboratory (SCALe) project. The project aims to create a set of rules that can be checked (and potentially enforced) and to develop checkers for these rules. These efforts are intended to increase confidence in continued safe and secure operation of mobile devices and the networks on which they operate. The focus for this phase of the project is the Android platform for mobile devices. Work described in this report involved three activities: (1) preparing the Java Coding Guidelines book for publication, (2) developing Android secure coding rules for the Android section of the CERT Oracle Secure Coding Standard for Java wiki, and (3) developing software that does static analysis of a set of Android apps for data flows between them so that security leaks can be detected.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.