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Dependency Labeler adds metadata about a container image's dependencies as a label to the container image. Formerly maintained by the NavCon team, currently maintained by the Source Insight Tooling team

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Dependency Labeler

Dependency Labeler(or deplab for short) generates and shows metadata about a container image's dependencies.

Obtain

Download the latest deplab release matching your OS from https://github.com/vmware-tanzu/dependency-labeler/releases/latest. Make it executable and move it to a directory in your PATH renaming it deplab.

Usage

By default deplab generates the metadata of an image and the provided git repository (from where the image is built). The metadata is placed in a label on the output image, which can be read by any automated process. Once an image is labelled with deplab the metadata can be visualized using inspect.

deplab currently supports the auto-generation of dpkg and rpm package lists. RPM support is currently experimental. It necessitates the presence of the rpm binary in the $PATH where deplab is run. Additional sources can be entered manually.

If the image being inspected was created by Cloud Native Buildpacks, deplab will report the buildpack build metadata found on the io.buildpacks.build.metadata label on the image.

To generate the metadata and output a labelled image, run

./deplab --image <image-name> --git <path to git repo> --output-tar <path to output tar>

Then, to visualise the metadata (optional), run

./deplab inspect --image-tar <path to output tar>

Generate metadata

deplab requires two input flags: an image source (remote --image or a local archive --image-tar) and the --git flag. At least one output flag needs to be specified (--output-tar, --metadata-file, --dpkg-file).

./deplab --image-tar <path to input tar> \
    --git <path to git repo> \
    --output-tar <path to output tar>

Generate flags

short flag long flag value type description remarks
-g --git path path to a directory under git revision control Required. Can be provided multiple times.
-i --image string image which will be analysed by deplab Optional. Cannot be used with --image-tar flag
-p --image-tar path path to tarball of input image Optional, but required for Concourse. Cannot be used with --image flag
-u --additional-source-url url url to the source of a dependency Optional. Can be provided multiple times.
-a --additional-sources-file path path to file containing yaml describing additional sources Optional. Can be provided multiple times.
-t --tag string tags the output image Optional
-d --dpkg-file path write dpkg list metadata in (modified) 'dpkg -l' format to a file at this path Optional
-m --metadata-file path write metadata to this file at the given path Optional
-o --output-tar path path to write a tarball of the image to Optional, but required for Concourse
--ignore-validation-errors By default deplab will exit with a non-zero exit code if a validation error is encountered. This flag will instead force deplab to output the validation failure message as a warning in StdErr and continue. Optional
-h --help help for deplab
--version version for deplab

Inspect

Inspect reports on the content of the container image and also validates any existing deplab labels that it finds on the image. It will additionally show elements of the deplab label on the image that cannot be generated by inspecting the image, e.g. git and archive urls. Inspect prints its findings to stdout and reports any validation warnings to stderr. The label will be printed in JSON format.

The inspect command can be used on both images which have been previously labelled by deplab and images which have not.

deplab inspect requires one image source to be specified (--image or --image-tar).

./deplab inspect --image <image-name>

Inspect flags

short flag long flag value type description remarks
-i --image string image to be inspected by deplab Optional. Cannot be used with --image-tar flag
-p --image-tar path path to tarball of input image to be inspected by deplab Optional, but required for Concourse. Cannot be used with --image flag

Detailed flag descriptions

Input flag descriptions

Git

You can specify as many git repositories as required by passing more than one git flag into the command.

Image

deplab accepts as input an image stored in the local registry (tags, sha, or image id are all valid options). One and only one of --image or --image-tar have to be used when invoking deplab.

Image tarball

deplab accepts as input an image stored in tar format (e.g. the output of docker save ... or of a concourse task). One and only one of --image or --image-tar have to be used when invoking deplab.

Additional sources

Your image may have additional dependencies installed. These are dependencies which cannot be interpreted by dpkg or have been specified using the --git flag. For OSL purposes you need to provide the source of these dependencies. The flags below allow you to specify the sources for these dependencies.

Additional source url

Additional source url allows you to specify a url which points to an archived source of a dependency. You can specify as many source urls as required using additional --additional-source-url flags.

Validation: The urls must be valid and reachable. There is also a check to ensure that the url points to a compressed file type. Only the extension is checked and not the contents of the file. On encountering an invalid url, deplab will provide an error message in StdErr. By default deplab will exit with a non-zero exit code. This default behaviour can be altered by using the --ignore-validation-errors flag, and deplab will continue and exit with a zero exit code.

Additional sources file

Additional sources file allows you to specify sources for additional dependencies as source archives or version control systems. You can specify as many of each type as required within a file, and as many additional sources files as required by passing more than one --additional-sources-file flags.

Validation:

  • archives: The urls must be valid and reachable. There is also a check to ensure that the url points to a compressed file type. Only the extension is checked and not the contents of the file.
  • vcs: The url for git repository urls must start with one of the following: git:, ssh:, http:, https: or git@xxxx. On encountering an invalid value, deplab will provide an error message in StdErr. By default deplab will exit with a non-zero exit code. This default behaviour can be altered by using the --ignore-validation-errors flag, and deplab will continue and exit with a zero exit code.

Supported format of the yaml file:

archives:
- url: <url to source archive>
vcs:
- protocol: git
  version: <commit sha>
  url: <git repository url>

Output flag descriptions

Tag

Optionally, the image can be tagged when exported as tar using the provided tag. The tag needs to be a valid docker tag.

Tar

Optionally deplab can output the image in tar format.

If a file exists at the given path, the file will be overwritten.

Metadata file

Optionally deplab can output the metadata to a file providing the path with the argument --metadata-file or -m

If a file exists at the given path, the file will be overwritten.

dpkg file

Optionally deplab can output the debian package list portion of the metadata to a file with the argument --dpkg-file or -d

If a file exists at the given path, the file will be overwritten.

This file is approximately similar to the file which will be output by running dpkg -l, with the addition of an extra header which provides an ID for this list.

Examples

Basic usage

deplab --image <image-reference> \
  --git <path-to-repo> \
  --output-tar <path-to-image-output> 

Multiple git inputs

deplab --image <image-reference> \
  --git <path-to-repo> \
  --git <path-to-another-repo> \
  --output-tar <path-to-image-output> 

Input image as tar

deplab --image-tar <path-to-image-tar> \
  --git <path-to-repo> \
  --output-tar <path-to-image-output> 

Multiple additional source url inputs

deplab --image <image-reference> \
  --git <path-to-repo> \
  --additional-source-url <url to archive> \
  --additional-source-url <url to archive> \
  --output-tar <path-to-image-output>

Multiple additional-sources-file inputs

deplab --image <image-reference> \
  --git <path-to-repo> \
  --additional-sources-file <path to file> \
  --additional-sources-file <path to file> \
  --output-tar <path-to-image-output>

Tag output image

deplab --image <image-reference> \
  --git <path-to-repo> \
  --tag <tag> \
  --output-tar <path-to-image-output>

dpkg list file

deplab --image <image-reference> \
  --git <path-to-repo> \
  --dpkg-file <path-to-dpkg-file-output>

metadata file

deplab --image <image-reference> \
  --git <path-to-repo> \
  --metadata-file <path-to-metadata-file-output>

inspecting a tarball file

deplab inspect --image-tar <image-reference>

Data

debian package list

The debian_package_list requires the Debian package db to be present at /var/lib/dpkg/status or /var/lib/status.d/* on the image being instrumented on. If not present, the dependency of type debian_package_list will be omitted.

version contains the sha256 of the json content of the metadata. Successive run of deplab on containers with the same packages and apt_sources will generate the same digest.

The debian package list is generated with the following format.

{
  "dependencies": [
    {
      "type": "debian_package_list",
      "version": {
        "sha256": "a56...42b"
      },
      "source": {
        "type": "inline",
        "version": null,
        "metadata": {
          "packages": [...],
          "apt_sources": [...]
        }
      }
    }
  ]
}

Example of a package item in field packages

{
  "package": "zlib1g",
  "version": "1:1.2.11.dfsg-0ubuntu2",
  "architecture": "amd64",
  "source": {
    "package": "zlib",
    "version": "1:1.2.11.dfsg-0ubuntu2",
    "upstreamVersion": "1.2.11.dfsg"
  }
}

Example of apt_sources content

[
  "deb http://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu/ bionic main restricted",
  "deb http://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu/ bionic-updates main restricted",
  "deb http://security.ubuntu.com/ubuntu/ bionic-security main restricted",
  "deb http://security.ubuntu.com/ubuntu/ bionic-security universe",
  "deb http://security.ubuntu.com/ubuntu/ bionic-security multiverse"
]
git dependency

For each --git flag provided a git dependency will be present in the metadata

If the --git flag is provided with a valid path to a git repository, a git dependency will be added:

{
  "dependencies": [
    {...},
    {
      "type": "package",
      "source": {
        "type": "git",
        "version": {
          "commit":  "d2c[...]efd"
         },
        "metadata": {
          "url": "https://github.com/vmware-tanzu/dependency-labeler.git",
          "refs": ["0.5.0"]
        }
      }
    }
  ]
}
additional source url

For each --additional-source-url flag provided an archive object will be present in the metadata

{
  "dependencies": [
    {...},
    {
      "type": "package",
      "source": {
        "type": "archive",
        "metadata": {
          "url": "http://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu/pool/main/c/ca-certificates/ca-certificates_20180409.tar.xz"
        }
      }
    }
  ]
}

base

The base image metadata is generated with the following format

  "base": {
    "name": "Ubuntu",
    "version_id": "18.04",
    "version_codename": "bionic",
    ...
  }

it includes all the content of /etc/os-release present on the image (keys are lower-cased).

This relies on the /etc/os-release file being in the docker container. If /etc/os-release is not present all the field will be set to unknown.

{
  "name": "unknown",
  "version_id": "unknown",
  "version_codename": "unknown"
}

provenance

Provenance is a list of the tools which have added information to the image. It is generated in the following format

  "provenance": [
    {
      "name": "deplab",
      "version": "0.0.0-dev",
      "url": "https://github.com/vmware-tanzu/dependency-labeler"
    }
  ]

Testing

Testing requires go to be installed.

go test ./...

Tests that pull images from registry are tagged [remote-image].

To skip those tests, you can run

go test ./...  -ginkgo.skip='\[remote-image\]'

Building

To build for release, please run the following:

go build -o deplab ./cmd/deplab

Support

This tool is currently maintained by the VMware Tanzu Source Insight Tooling Team. Please raise a GitHub issue for any issues, suggestions, and questions.

About

Dependency Labeler adds metadata about a container image's dependencies as a label to the container image. Formerly maintained by the NavCon team, currently maintained by the Source Insight Tooling team

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