The DISTRO2SBOM generates a SBOM (Software Bill of Materials) for either an installed application or a complete system installation in a number of formats including SPDX and CycloneDX. An SBOM for an installed package will identify all of its dependent components.
It is intended to be used as part of a continuous integration system to enable accurate records of SBOMs to be maintained and also to support subsequent audit needs to determine if a particular component (and version) has been used.
To install use the following command:
pip install distro2sbom
Alternatively, just clone the repo and install dependencies using the following command:
pip install -U -r requirements.txt
The tool requires Python 3 (3.7+). It is recommended to use a virtual python environment especially
if you are using different versions of python. virtualenv
is a tool for setting up virtual python environments which
allows you to have all the dependencies for the tool set up in a single environment, or have different environments set
up for testing using different versions of Python.
usage: distro2sbom [-h] [--distro {rpm,deb,windows,auto}] [-i INPUT_FILE] [-n NAME] [-r RELEASE] [-p PACKAGE] [-s] [--root ROOT] [--distro-namespace DISTRO_NAMESPACE]
[--product-type {application,framework,library,container,operating-system,device,firmware,file}] [--product-name PRODUCT_NAME] [--product-version PRODUCT_VERSION]
[--product-author PRODUCT_AUTHOR] [-d] [--sbom {spdx,cyclonedx}] [--format {tag,json,yaml}] [-o OUTPUT_FILE] [-V]
Distro2Sbom generates a Software Bill of Materials for the specified package or distribution.
options:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-V, --version show program's version number and exit
Input:
--distro {rpm,deb,windows,auto}
type of distribution (default: auto)
-i INPUT_FILE, --input-file INPUT_FILE
name of distribution file
-n NAME, --name NAME name of distribution
-r RELEASE, --release RELEASE
release identity of distribution
-p PACKAGE, --package PACKAGE
identity of package within distribution
-s, --system generate SBOM for installed system
--root ROOT location of distribution packages
--distro-namespace DISTRO_NAMESPACE
namespace for distribution
Product:
--product-type {application,framework,library,container,operating-system,device,firmware,file}
type of product
--product-name PRODUCT_NAME
name of product
--product-version PRODUCT_VERSION
version of product
--product-author PRODUCT_AUTHOR
author of product
Output:
-d, --debug add debug information
--sbom {spdx,cyclonedx}
specify type of sbom to generate (default: spdx)
--format {tag,json,yaml}
specify format of software bill of materials (sbom) (default: tag)
-o OUTPUT_FILE, --output-file OUTPUT_FILE
output filename (default: output to stdout)
The --distro
option is used to identify the type of distribution. The default option is auto which attempts to determine the type of distribution by searching for the
presence of key applications required by the tool. If none of the required applications are found, the tool terminates.
The --name
option and --release
option is used to identify the name and release of the distribution. These options are
optional but if they are specified, values for both options are required. If they are not specified, values for these options shall be obtained from system files installed on the system.
The --input-file
option is used to provide a filename containing the list of packages installed on the system. The format of the file is dependent on the specified --distro
option.
-
deb. The file used is the output of the following command
dpkg -l > [filename.out]
Sample file contents
Desired=Unknown/Install/Remove/Purge/Hold | Status=Not/Inst/Conf-files/Unpacked/halF-conf/Half-inst/trig-aWait/Trig-pend |/ Err?=(none)/Reinst-required (Status,Err: uppercase=bad) ||/ Name Version Architecture Description +++-================================================-===================================-============-================================================================================== ii acl 2.3.1-1 amd64 access control list - utilities ii adduser 3.129 all add and remove users and groups ii adwaita-icon-theme 43-1 all default icon theme of GNOME ii alien 8.95.6 all convert and install rpm and other packages ii alsa-tools 1.2.5-2 amd64 Console based ALSA utilities for specific hardware
-
rpm. The file used is the output of the following command. Note that it is recommended to sort the list of files as this makes it easier to find the packages in the SBOM.
rpm -qa | sort > [filename.out]
Sample file contents
accountsservice-0.6.55-10.el9.x86_64 accountsservice-libs-0.6.55-10.el9.x86_64 acl-2.3.1-3.el9.x86_64 adcli-0.9.1-7.el9.x86_64 adwaita-cursor-theme-40.1.1-3.el9.noarch adwaita-icon-theme-40.1.1-3.el9.noarch
-
windows. The file used is the output of the following command
get-wmiobject -class win32_product | Out-file -filePath [filename.out]
Sample file contents
IdentifyingNumber : {....} Name : Python 3.10.5 Utility Scripts (64-bit) Vendor : Python Software Foundation Version : 3.10.5150.0 Caption : Python 3.10.5 Utility Scripts (64-bit)
If the specified filename is not found, the tool will terminate.
The --package
option is used to identify the name of a package or application installed on the system. If the specified package or application is not found, the tool terminates.
This option is not supported if the --distro
option is set to 'windows'.
The --system
option is used to generate an SBOM for all the applications installed on the system. Note that this option will take some time to complete as it is dependent on the number of installed applications.
This option is not supported if the --distro
option is set to 'windows'.
The --root
option is used to specify an alternative directory location for the installed packages. This option only applies for 'deb' distributions.
The --disto-namespace
option is used to specify a namespace to be included in the generated PURL identifiers for the packages.
At least one of the --input-file
, --package
or --system
options must be specified. If multiple options are specified, the --input-file
option followed by the --system
option will be assumed.
The --product-type
, --product-name
, --product-version
and --product-author
options allow the specification of the top level
component within the SBOM. These option only apply to CycloneDX SBOMs. The default for product type is 'application' but it is always 'operating-system' if the --system
option is specified.
The --sbom
option is used to specify the format of the generated SBOM (the default is SPDX). The --format
option
can be used to specify the formatting of the SBOM (the default is Tag Value format for a SPDX SBOM). JSON format is supported for both
SPDX and CycloneDX SBOMs.
The --output-file
option is used to control the destination of the output generated by the tool. The
default is to report to the console but can be stored in a file (specified using --output-file
option).
To generate an SBOM for the installed zip package.
distro2sbom --distro auto --name <distro name> --release <distro release> --package zip
This will automatically detect the type of distribution and generate an SBOM in SPDX Tag value format to the console.
To generate an SBOM for a system distribution.
distro2sbom --distro deb --name <distro name> --release <distro release> --input-file <distrofile> --sbom cyclonedx --output-file <distrooutfile>
This will generate an SBOM in CycloneDX JSON value for a distribution file in dpkg format (indicated by the 'deb' option)
To generate an SBOM for an installed system, obtaining the name and release of the system from installed system files.
distro2sbom --distro deb --system --format json --output-file <distrooutfile>
This will generate an SBOM in SPDX JSON value for a distribution file in dpkg format (indicated by the 'deb' option)
The following [optional] environment variable are available to customize rpm and yum commands used by the tool. This can be usefull for example to enable/disable some repo or to support chrooted environments.
- DISTRO2SBOM_ROOT_PATH The path prefix where to get
/etc/os-release
- DISTRO2SBOM_RPM_OPTIONS Additional options passed to rpm commands (used by
rpm -qa
to list all packages andrpm -qi <pkg>
to query information on a package) - DISTRO2SBOM_YUM_OPTIONS Additional options passed to yum commands (used by
yum repoquery --deplist <pkg>
to get dependencies)
export DISTRO2SBOM_ROOT_PATH=/path-to-distrib/slash
export DISTRO2SBOM_RPM_OPTIONS="--root /path-to-distrib/slash"
export DISTRO2SBOM_YUM_OPTIONS="--installroot=/path-to-distrib/slash --setopt=reposdir=/path-to-distrib/repos --setopt=install_weak_deps=False --repo=my-repo"
distro2sbom --distro rpm --system --sbom cyclonedx --format json --output-file <distrooutfile>
This will generate an SBOM in CYCLONEDX JSON value for a chrooted distribution located at /path-to-distrib/slash
Licenced under the Apache 2.0 Licence.
This tool is meant to support software development and security audit functions. However, the usefulness of the tool is dependent on the SBOM data which is provided to the tool. Unfortunately, the tool is unable to determine the validity or completeness of such a SBOM file; users of the tool are therefore reminded that they should assert the quality of any data which is provided to the tool.
When processing and validating licenses, the application will use a set of synonyms to attempt to map some license identifiers to the correct SPDX License Identifiers. However, the user of the tool is reminded that they should assert the quality of any data which is provided by the tool particularly where the license identifier has been modified.
Dependencies between applications are only produced for the --package
and --system
options.
The --package
option is not supported if the --distro
option is set to 'windows'.
Whilst PURL and CPE references are automatically generated for components, the accuracy of such references cannot be guaranteed as they are dependent on the validity of the data associated with the component.
Bugs and feature requests can be made via GitHub Issues.