A small application for Python 2 and 3 which generates SWID tags from Linux package managers like dpkg, rpm or pacman.
The tool provides 2 subcommands to generate SWID tags or Software IDs.
Generate SWID tags:
usage: swid_generator swid [-h] [--env {auto,dpkg,pacman,rpm}] [--doc-separator DOCUMENT_SEPARATOR] [--regid REGID] [--entity-name ENTITY_NAME] [--os OS_STRING] [--arch ARCHITECTURE] [--full] [--pretty] [--hierarchic] [--hash HASH_ALGORITHMS] [--pkcs12 PKCS12] [--pkcs12-pwd PASSWORD] [--software-id SOFTWARE-ID | --package PACKAGE | --package-file FILE_PATH] [--evidence PATH] [--name NAME] [--version-string VERSION] [--new-root PATH] Generate SWID tags. optional arguments: -h, --help show this help message and exit --env {auto,dpkg,pacman,rpm} The package manager environment to be used. Defaults to "auto". If the environment can not be autodetected, the exit code is set to 3. --doc-separator DOCUMENT_SEPARATOR The separator string by which the SWID XML documents are separated. Example: For one newline, use $'\n'. --regid REGID The regid to use in the generated output. May not contain any whitespace characters. Default is "strongswan.org". --entity-name ENTITY_NAME The entity name used in the <Entity> XML tag. Default is "strongSwan Project". --os OS_STRING The OS string used in the tagId attribute. Default is derived from the OS of the local host. --arch ARCHITECTURE The HW architecture used in the tagId attribute. Default is derived from the HW architecture of the local host. --full Dump the full SWID tags including directory/file tags for each package. --pretty Indent the XML output. --hierarchic Change directory structure to hierarchic. --hash HASH_ALGORITHMS Define the algorithm for the file hashes ("sha256", "sha384", "sha512"). Multiple hashes can be added with comma separated. ("sha256,sha384") Default is "sha256" --pkcs12 PKCS12 The PKCS#12 container with key and certificate to sign the xml output. --pkcs12-pwd PASSWORD If the PKCS#12 file is password protected, the password needs to be provided. targeted requests: You may do a targeted request against either a Software-ID, a package name, a package file or a folder structure. The output only contains a SWID tag if the argument fully matches the given target. If no matching SWID tag is found, the output is empty and the exit code is set to 1. --software-id SOFTWARE-ID Do a targeted request for the specified Software-ID. A Software-ID is made up as follows: "{regid}__{unique-id}". Example: "strongswan.org__Ubuntu_16.04-i686-strongswan-5.6.0". If no matching package is found, the output is empty and the exit code is set to 1. --package PACKAGE Do a targeted request for the specified package name. The package name corresponds to a package name returned by the environment's package manager, e.g "glibc-headers" on a dpkg managed environment. If no matching package is found, the output is empty and the exit code is set to 1. --package-file FILE_PATH Create SWID-Tag based on information of a Package- File. Rpm-Environment: *.rpm File, Dpkg-Environment: *.deb File, Pacman-Environment: *.pgk.tar.xz File --evidence PATH Create a SWID Tag from a directory on the filesystem. This changes the payload element to an evidence element. --name NAME Specify a name for a directory based SWID-Tag. Default is "{evidence-path}_{os-string}" --version-string VERSION Specify the version for a directory based SWID-Tag. Default is "1.0.0" --new-root PATH Change the displayed "root"-folder from the provided directory to a different path.
Generate Software IDs:
usage: swid_generator software-id [-h] [--env {auto,dpkg,pacman,rpm}] [--doc-separator DOCUMENT_SEPARATOR] [--regid REGID] Generate Software-IDs. optional arguments: -h, --help show this help message and exit --env {auto,dpkg,pacman,rpm} The package manager environment to be used. Defaults to "auto". If the environment can not be autodetected, the exit code is set to 3. --doc-separator DOCUMENT_SEPARATOR The separator string by which the SWID XML documents are separated. Example: For one newline, use $'\n'. --regid REGID The regid to use in the generated output. May not contain any whitespace characters. Default is "strongswan.org".
If the application fails somehow, an exit code is set appropriately:
- 1: A targeted request did not return any results.
- 2: Invalid arguments passed.
- 3: Either the given environment is not installed or the environment could not be autodetected.
- 4: An internal error has occured.
- 5: An external command has thrown an error.
The exit code can be shown with:
$ echo $?
URI reserved characters (:/?#[]@!$&'()*+,;=
) in the package name / version
section of the Unique-ID are replaced with a tilde (~
) sign.
The following package managers are supported:
- dpkg (Debian, Ubuntu, Linux Mint, ...)
- pacman (Arch Linux, Manjaro, ...)
- rpm (Fedora, Red Hat, OpenSUSE, ...)
The following Python versions are fully supported:
- Python 2.7
- Python 3.3
- Python 3.4
- Python 3.5
- Python 3.6
- PyPy
Important: Python 2.6 no longer supported.
To take advantage of the generator's whole functionality, following packages must be installed before usage:
For the function --package-file (Generate SWID-Tag based on Package-File information):
- Debian: tar, ar
- Redhat: rpm2cpio, cpio
- Archlinux: tar
For the function --pkcs12 (Sign SWID-Tag):
- Debian, Redhat and Archlinux: xmlsec1
The recommended way to install swidGenerator is using pip:
$ sudo pip install -U swid_generator
This will automatically install the latest version from the Python Package Index.
Get code:
$ wget https://github.com/strongswan/swidGenerator/archive/v1.0.3.zip $ unzip v1.0.3.zip $ cd swidGenerator-1.0.3
Install:
$ sudo python setup.py install
To make invocation easier during development, use pip's editable installation feature instead, which means that changes in the code are immediately reflected:
$ pip install -e .
If you have installed the application, you can run the generator via the
swid_generator
binary:
$ swid_generator
You can also invoke the generator directly from the source directory, without any prior installation:
$ python -m swid_generator.main
Setup
Testing for swidGenerator is set up using Tox and pytest. Violations of the coding guidelines (PEP8 with a few small tweaks) are counted as test fails.
The only requirement to run the tests is tox:
$ pip install tox
Running tests
To test only a single Python version, use the -e
parameter:
$ tox -e py27
To see the coverage, use the cov
testenv (which uses Python 2.7 by
default):
$ tox -e cov
You can also combine multiple testenvs, just make sure that you have the corresponding Python versions installed:
$ tox -e py27,py34,cov
Integration testing
The support on each distribution-base (Debian, Redhat and Archlinux) is guaranteed by the integration tests, which runs in docker containers. The Dockerfiles for these containers are hosted on Dockerhub and are pulled directly from the Travis-CI Build-server. These tests are started by the integration_test_runner.py script as follows:
python integration_test_runner.py <path_to_sourcecode_folder> <specific_python_version> <list_of_environments>;
- <path_to_sourcecode_folder>: Actual SourceCode folder (e.g: echo ${PWD}, Format: /path/to/sourcecode/)
- <specific_python_version>: Specific Python version (e.g: $TOXENV, Format: py27, py33, py36, etc.)
- <list_of_environments>: List of the environments. (e.g: dpkg pacman rpm)
Usage of the docker containers are described on Dockerhub-Repository
CI
We use different continuous integration / quality assurance services:
- Travis CI (testing): https://travis-ci.org/strongswan/swidGenerator
- Coveralls (test coverage): https://coveralls.io/r/strongswan/swidGenerator
- Landscape (code quality): https://landscape.io/github/strongswan/swidGenerator/
Use PEP8 with --max-line-length=149
and the following error codes ignored:
E126 E127 E128
.
To upload a new version to PyPI, configure your .pypirc
and execute the
following commands:
$ pip install wheel $ python setup.py register $ python setup.py sdist upload $ python setup.py bdist_wheel upload
You can create an unsigned .deb package using the package.sh
script:
$ ./package.sh ... $ ls dist/ swid-generator_1.0.3-1_all.deb
Note that this only works on a debian based system. Take a look at the comments in the script for more information.
You can build a manpage using Sphinx:
$ cd docs $ make man $ man ./_build/man/swid_generator.1
The MIT License (MIT)
Copyright (c) 2014 Christian Fässler, Danilo Bargen, Jonas Furrer. Copyright (c) 2017 Davide De Giorgio, Christof Greiner. Copyright (c) 2017 Andreas Steffen.
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.