In honor of CAN to CVE switchover day, I''ve written a program that will notice changes in the testing security teams''s database of security issues, and uses this to set/unset usertags (with debian-security@lists.debian.org as the "user") in the BTS. So for any CVE that we record as having a bug report, that bug report will be automatically usertagged with the CVE id. The program has imported all our existing (unfortunatly not complete for the whole history of the team) information about security bugs, so 520 bugs already have CVE usertags now. You can see some of them here: http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/pkgreport.cgi?tag=security;users=debian-security@lists.debian.org (Or anywhere else in the BTS by adding ";users=debian-security@lists.debian.org" to the end of a URL.) The program also adds another tag, "tracked" for all bugs that have an entry in our list. This is to help in finding bugs that we''re not tracking. Here for example is a view into the BTS of security bugs categorised[1] based on whether or not they are currently tracked by the testing security team: http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/pkgreport.cgi?tag=security;users=debian-security@lists.debian.org;ordering=tracked Any changes should be reflected in the BTS within half an hour of the commit to our repository. Of course anyone can also add (or remove) CVE id usertags to bugs on their own if they want to. -- see shy jo [1] Using the following usercategory definition, if you''re curious: user debian-security@lists.debian.org usercategory is-tracked [hidden] * Tracked or not [tag=] + tracked [tracked] + untracked [] usercategory tracked * is-tracked * status * severity * category -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: not available Type: application/pgp-signature Size: 189 bytes Desc: Digital signature Url : http://lists.alioth.debian.org/pipermail/secure-testing-team/attachments/20051019/3fe45e81/attachment.pgp