Canonical is pleased to share its latest research report, “The open source chain of trust.” Based on a survey of 500 DevOps professionals, the report highlights how organizations approach their open source software supply chains. While many companies are moving toward verifiable provenance and automated security workflows, internal misalignment and disjointed approaches remain serious challenges for most teams.Read the reportOpen source is the fabric of modern IT, but management remains fragmentedOpen source powers development toolchains and underpins cloud-native platforms. It runs across on-prem, cloud, and edge environments. While organizations formalize policies and adopt security tools, many rely on fragmented processes with significant visibility gaps in CI/CD process between development and production stages. This research shows that 90% of respondents believe their organization needs to improve cross-team collaboration regarding open source software.Figure 1: overview of key findings from the researchOrganizations often stitch together components from many sources using inconsistent methods and misaligned upgrade cadences. Security teams struggle to manage transitive dependencies in this environment. Meanwhile, operations teams face constant trade-offs between stability and necessary changes.“Open source is a critical foundation of the enterprise, but managing the dependency sprawl can be an operational and security challenge. On top of these existing supply chain challenges, the cadence of software development is accelerating. Consequently, it is increasingly crucial for organizations to bring automation and cross-team collaboration into their SDLC governance.”– Rachel Stephens, Research Director at RedMonkKey findings from the researchThe report identifies operational challenges and highlights how internal misalignment impacts software supply chains:Cross-team tensions stall progress: 71% of respondents report tensions between DevOps and platform engineering teams regarding the scalable use of open source.Manual processes hinder maturity: 35% of organizations still rely on manual code reviews for security. Another 21% use manual methods to track vulnerabilities.Operational risk drives patching delays: Primary causes for delays include system compatibility concerns (53%) and resource constraints like staff shortages (43%).Figure 2: Most common causes of delays in organizations’ ability to patch vulnerabilities, top 3 combined answers.Mitigating gaps through a trusted foundationThe research highlights a clear path toward more predictable and secure operations:Rely on the operating system as a strategic control plane: 98% of respondents describe the OS as extremely or very important for detecting and applying updates to open source components, suggesting it can serve as a central layer to govern supply chain hygiene.Establish verifiable provenance: 48% of respondents state that tracked packages would improve their confidence in software supply chain security.Strengthening collaboration: Choosing the right platform as a foundation brings consistent governance and strengthens the working relationship between DevOps, security, and operations.Discover all the insights from the research“This new research highlights that scaling open source innovation requires organizations to move beyond fragmented workflows to adopt a stable foundation that can help fast-track security and compliance. At Canonical, we help our customers achieve exactly this by simplifying vulnerability management and providing a single, verifiable stack with trusted end-to-end provenance.”– Lech Sandecki, Product Manager at CanonicalTrusted open source with CanonicalMaturing processes and improving internal alignment are critical for addressing security concerns. Through Ubuntu Pro, Canonical delivers consistent security maintenance for the operating system and thousands of upstream open source packages.By streamlining vulnerability management and committing to up to 15 years of platform stability through backporting, Canonical helps resolve the inherent tension between rigorous security and operational uptime. This shift moves organizations from a state of fragmented visibility and complex management to one of securely designed architecture, ensuring the open source fabric they depend on remains a source of innovation and not of risk.About the researchThe report is based on a global survey of 500 IT professionals conducted by Vanson Bourne. Respondents represent organizations across the Americas, EMEA, and APAC.Further resources on open source securityRead our latest research into software supply chains. Canonical offers in-depth guides to help you secure open source ecosystems and navigate supply chain complexities.The state of software supply chains: Explore IDC research detailing why software supply security remains a challenge despite greater patching efforts, and how AI is making the compliance landscape more challenging. Download the research report A guide to open source vulnerability management: Discover the main challenges with open source security vulnerabilities, best practices for effective vulnerability management and how to apply cybersecurity frameworks like the NIST framework with Ubuntu Pro. Download the guide