Author: Kate Stewart, VP of Dependable Systems, The Linux Foundation
In a previous Linux Foundation blog, David A. Wheeler, director of LF Supply Chain Security, discussed how capabilities built by Linux Foundation communities can be used to address the software supply chain security requirements set by the US Executive Order on Cybersecurity.
One of those capabilities, SPDX, completely addresses the Executive Order 4(e) and 4(f) and 10(j) requirements for a Software Bill of Materials (SBOM). The SPDX specification is implemented as a file format that identifies the software components within a larger piece of computer software and metadata such as the licenses of those components.
SPDX is an open standard for communicating software bill of material (SBOM) information, including components, licenses, copyrights, and security references. It has a rich ecosystem of existing tools that provides a common format for companies and communities to share important data to streamline and improve the identification and monitoring of software.
SBOMs have numerous use cases. They have frequently been used in areas such as license compliance but are equally useful in security, export control, and broader processes such as mergers and acquisitions (M&A) processes or venture capital investments. SDPX maintains an active community to support various uses, modeling its governance and activity on the same format that has successfully supported open source software projects over the past three decades.
The LF has been developing and refining SPDX for over ten years and has seen extensive uptake by companies and projects in the software industry. Notable recent examples are the contributions by companies such as Hitachi, Fujitsu, and Toshiba in furthering the standard via optional profiles like “SPDX Lite” in the SPDX 2.2 specification release and in support of the SPDX SBOMs in proprietary and open source automation solutions.
This de facto standard has been submitted to ISO via the Joint Development Foundation using the PAS Transposition process of Joint Technical Committee 1 (JTC1). It is currently in the enquiry phase of the process and can be reviewed on the ISO website as ISO/IEC DIS 5962.
There is a wide range of open source tooling, as well as commercial tool options emerging as well as options available today. Companies such as FOSSID and Synopsys have been working with the SPDX format for several years. Open Source tools like FOSSology (source code Analysis), OSS Review Toolkit (Generation from CI & Build infrastructure), Tern (container content analysis), Quartermaster (build extensions), ScanCode (source code analysis) in addition to the SPDX-tools project have also standardized on using SPDX for the interchange are also participating in Automated Compliance Tooling (ACT) Project Umbrella. ACT has been discussed as community-driven solutions for software supply chain security remediation as part of our synopsis of the findings in the Vulnerabilities in the Core study, which was published by the Linux Foundation and Harvard University LISH in February of 2020.
One thing is clear: A software bill of materials that can be shared without friction between different teams and companies will be a core part of software development and deployment in this coming decade. The sharing of software metadata will take different forms, including manual and automated reviews, but the core structures will remain the same.
Standardization in this field, as in others, is the key to success. This domain has an advantage in that we are benefiting from an entire decade of prior work in SPDX. Therefore the process becomes the implementation of this standard to the various domains rather than the creation, expansion, or additional refinement of new or budding approaches to the matter.
Start using the SPDX specification here:https://spdx.github.io/spdx-spec/. Development of the next revision is underway, so If there’s a use case you can’t represent with the current specification, open an issue, this is the right window for input.
To learn more about the many facets of the SPDX project see: https://spdx.dev/
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