A simple wrapper for the Fossology REST API.
See the OpenAPI specification used to implement this library.
Current release is compatible with Fossology version 4.2.1 - API version 1.4.3.
See release notes for all details.
The list of unsupported API features is documented in issue #52.
See fossology-python on Github Pages.
This project is available as Python package on PyPi.org.
Install fossology and required dependencies:
pip install fossology requests
Get a REST API token either from the Fossology server under ``User->Edit user account`` or generate a token using the method available in this library:
from fossology import fossology_token from fossology.obj import TokenScope FOSSOLOGY_SERVER = "https://fossology.example.com/" FOSSOLOGY_USER = "fossy" FOSSOLOGY_PASSWORD = "fossy" TOKEN_NAME = "fossy_token" token = fossology_token( FOSSOLOGY_SERVER, FOSSOLOGY_USER, FOSSOLOGY_PASSWORD, TOKEN_NAME, TokenScope.WRITE )
Start using the API:
from fossology import Fossology # Starting from API version 1.2.3, the `FOSSOLOGY_USER` option is not needed anymore foss = Fossology(FOSSOLOGY_SERVER, token, FOSSOLOGY_USER) print(f"Logged in as user {foss.user.name}")
Fossology Python also offers a command line interface to simplify interactions with your Fossology server.
To get a list of available commands, run:
$ foss_cli --help Usage: foss_cli [OPTIONS] COMMAND [ARGS]...
Generate a configuration file:
$ foss_cli config Enter the URL to your Fossology server: e.g. http://fossology/repo Fossology URL: http://fossology/repo Enter Username and Password: e.g. fossy/fossy (in the default environment) Username: fossy Password: Enter a scope for your Fossology token: either 'read' or 'write' Token scope: write
This will get a token from Fossology server and store it within the local
.foss_cli.ini
file.On subsequent foss_cli calls those values will be reused.
Re-run the config command to create a new token once it expired.
Verbosity of all foss_cli commands could be increased using the
-v
verbosity option:$ foss_cli -vv [COMMAND]
This runs the given command with verbosity level 2 (all debug statements will be logged).
A log file in directory
.foss_cli_results
named.foss_cli.log
will be created.To create a group:
$ foss_cli -vv create_group FossGroup
To create a a folder:
$ foss_cli -vv create_folder FossFolder \ --folder_group FossGroup \ --folder_description "Description of FossFolder"
To upload a file:
$ foss_cli -vv upload_file tests/files/zlib_1.2.11.dfsg-0ubuntu2.debian.tar.xz \ --folder_name FossFolder --access_level public
To upload a source package to the server and initialize a scan workflow including report generation:
$ foss_cli -vv start_workflow --help Usage: foss_cli start_workflow [OPTIONS] FILE_NAME The foss_cli start_workflow command. Options: --folder_name TEXT The name of the folder to upload to. --file_description TEXT The description of the upload. --dry_run / --no_dry_run Do not upload but show what would be done. Use -vv to see output. --reuse_newest_upload / --no_reuse_newest_upload Reuse newest upload if available. --reuse_newest_job / --no_reuse_newest_job Reuse newest scheduled job for the upload if available. --report_format TEXT The name of the reportformat. [dep5, spdx2,spdxtv,readmeoss,unifiedreport] --access_level TEXT The access level of the upload.[private,protected,public] --help Show this message and exit.
- All contributions in form of bug reports, feature requests or merge requests!
- Use proper docstrings to document functions and classes
- Extend the testsuite poetry run pytest with the new functions/classes
- The documentation website can automatically be generated by the Sphinx autodoc extension
HINT
To avoid running the whole testsuite during development of a new branch with changing only touching the code related to the CLI, name your branchfeat/cli-{something}
and only thetest_foss_cli_*
will run in the pull request context.
You can build the PyPi package using poetry:
poetry build
Build documentation:
The static site is generated automatically by GitHub Actions on every merge to main branch and pushed to gh-pages branch. The action uses JamesIves/github-pages-deploy-action to deploy the static pages.
To build it locally
poetry run sphinx-build -b html docs-source docs/
Cleanup builds:
rm -r dist/ docs/
Each new release gets a new tag with important information about the changes added to the new release:
git tag -a vx.x.x -m "New major/minor/patch release x.x.x"
git push origin vx.x.x
Add required information in the corresponding release in the Github project.
The testsuite available in this project expects a running Fossology instance under the hostname fossology with the default admin user "fossy".
Use the latest Fossology container from Docker hub:
docker pull fossology/fossology tar xJf tests/files/base-files_11.tar.xz -C /tmp docker run --mount src="/tmp",dst=/tmp,type=bind --name fossology -p 80:80 fossology/fossology
Start the complete test suite or a specific test case (and generate coverage report):
poetry run coverage run --source=fossology -m pytest poetry run coverage report -m poetry run coverage html