curl -sSfL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xeol-io/xeol/main/install.sh | sh -s -- -b /usr/local/bin
Check installation or check version of xeol
xeol version
You can also choose another destination directory and release version for the installation. The destination directory doesn't need to be /usr/local/bin
, it just needs to be a location found in the user's PATH and writable by the user that's installing xeol.
curl -sSfL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xeol-io/xeol/main/install.sh | sh -s -- -b <DESTINATION_DIR> <RELEASE_VERSION>
brew tap xeol-io/xeol
brew install xeol
If you're using GitHub Actions, you can simply use the Xeol GitHub action to run EOL scans on your code or container images during your CI workflows.
We generate SLSA provenance for all Xeol releases starting with v0.9.5. You can verify the provenance for the release binaries like so:
- Install the slsa-framework/slsa-verifier#installation tool
- Download the signature file
multiple.intoto.jsonl
from a Xeol release - Download the Xeol release binary you want to verify
- Run
slsa-verifier verify-artifact --provenance-path multiple.intoto.jsonl <release-binary> --source-uri=github.com/xeol-io/xeol
You should see something like this is the release binary is verified:
➜ ~ slsa-verifier verify-artifact --provenance-path multiple.intoto.jsonl xeol_0.9.5_darwin_amd64.tar.gz --source-uri=github.com/xeol-io/xeol
Verified signature against tlog entry index 44906341 at URL: https://rekor.sigstore.dev/api/v1/log/entries/24296fb24b8ad77a658e74e86e03e7aedcca39eebddebf59310b4d9c463b037951109186d73a5681
Verified build using builder "https://github.com/slsa-framework/slsa-github-generator/.github/workflows/generator_generic_slsa3.yml@refs/tags/v1.9.0" at commit fdc6f5efca3f7277aacf25ef42f502355398f512
Verifying artifact xeol_0.9.5_darwin_amd64.tar.gz: PASSED
PASSED: Verified SLSA provenance
Install the binary, and make sure that xeol
is available in your path. To scan for EOL packages in an image:
xeol <image>
The above command scans for EOL packages that are visible in the container (i.e., the squashed representation of the image). To include software from all image layers in the scan, regardless of its presence in the final image, provide --scope all-layers
:
xeol <image> --scope all-layers
To run xeol from a Docker container so it can scan a running container, use the following command:
docker run --rm \
--volume /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock \
--name xeol noqcks/xeol:latest \
$(ImageName):$(ImageTag)
xeol can scan a variety of sources beyond those found in Docker.
# scan a container image archive (from the result of `docker image save ...`, `podman save ...`, or `skopeo copy` commands)
xeol path/to/image.tar
# scan a Singularity Image Format (SIF) container
xeol path/to/image.sif
# scan a directory
xeol dir:path/to/dir
Sources can be explicitly provided with a scheme:
podman:yourrepo/yourimage:tag use images from the Podman daemon
docker:yourrepo/yourimage:tag use images from the Docker daemon
docker-archive:path/to/yourimage.tar use a tarball from disk for archives created from "docker save"
oci-archive:path/to/yourimage.tar use a tarball from disk for OCI archives (from Skopeo or otherwise)
oci-dir:path/to/yourimage read directly from a path on disk for OCI layout directories (from Skopeo or otherwise)
singularity:path/to/yourimage.sif read directly from a Singularity Image Format (SIF) container on disk
dir:path/to/yourproject read directly from a path on disk (any directory)
sbom:path/to/syft.json read Syft JSON from path on disk
registry:yourrepo/yourimage:tag pull image directly from a registry (no container runtime required)
att:attestation.json --key cosign.pub explicitly use the input as an attestation
Use SBOMs for even faster EOL scanning in xeol:
# Then scan for new EOL packages as frequently as needed
xeol sbom:./sbom.json
# (You can also pipe the SBOM into xeol)
cat ./sbom.json | xeol
xeol supports input of Syft, SPDX, and CycloneDX SBOM formats. If Syft has generated any of these file types, they should have the appropriate information to work properly with xeol.
By default, xeol will match any package that has an EOL date that is less than the current date + 30d. In order to set a custom lookahead matching time, you can use --lookahead <duration>
. where <duration>
is like 1w
, 30d
or 1y
.
You can have xeol exit with an error if it finds any EOL packages. This is useful for CI/CD pipelines. To do this, use the --fail-on-eol-found
CLI flag.
xeol <image> --fail-on-eol-found
End of Life (EOL) means the vendor has decided the software in question has reached the end of its “useful lifespan.” After this particular date, the manufacturer no longer markets, sells, provides technical support, sustains, enhances, or fixes the product. Note that End of Life (EOL) and End of Support (EOS) are being treated as the same by xeol, even though various vendors may use these terms differently. EOL Software is a security risk because it is no longer being maintained and receiving security updates.
The data that xeol uses to determine if a package is EOL is sourced from endoflife.date. While endoflife.date includes extended support dates, xeol does not currently support this and we only match on the standard EOL support dates from vendors.
When xeol performs a scan for EOL packages, it does so using a database that's stored on your local filesystem, which is constructed by pulling data from endoflife.date.
By default, xeol automatically manages this database for you. xeol checks for new updates to the database to make sure that every scan uses up-to-date EOL information. This behavior is configurable. For more information, see the Managing xeeol's database section.
xeol's eol database is a SQLite file, named xeol.db
. Updates to the database are atomic: the entire database is replaced and then treated as "readonly" by xeol.
xeol's first step in a database update is discovering databases that are available for retrieval. xeol does this by requesting a "listing file" from a public endpoint:
https://data.xeol.io/xeol/databases/listing.json
The listing file contains entries for every database that's available for download.
Here's an example of an entry in the listing file:
{
"built": "2021-10-21T08:13:41Z",
"version": 3,
"url": "https://data.xeol.io/xeol/databases/eol-db_v3_2021-10-21T08:13:41Z.tar.gz",
"checksum": "sha256:8c99fb4e516f10b304f026267c2a73a474e2df878a59bf688cfb0f094bfe7a91"
}
With this information, xeol can select the correct database (the most recently built database with the current schema version), download the database, and verify the database's integrity using the listed checksum
value.
Note: During normal usage, there is no need for users to manage xeol's database! xeol manages its database behind the scenes. However, for users that need more control, xeol provides options to manage the database more explicitly.
By default, the database is cached on the local filesystem in the directory $XDG_CACHE_HOME/xeol/db/<SCHEMA-VERSION>/
. For example, on macOS, the database would be stored in ~/Library/Caches/xeol/db/3/
. (For more information on XDG paths, refer to the XDG Base Directory Specification.)
You can set the cache directory path using the environment variable XEOL_DB_CACHE_DIR
.
xeol needs up-to-date information to provide accurate EOL matches. By default, it will fail execution if the local database was not built in the last 5 days. The data staleness check is configurable via the environment variable XEOL_DB_MAX_ALLOWED_BUILT_AGE
and XEOL_DB_VALIDATE_AGE
or the field max-allowed-built-age
and validate-age
, under db
. It uses golang's time duration syntax. Set XEOL_DB_VALIDATE_AGE
or validate-age
to false
to disable staleness check.
By default, xeol checks for a new database on every run, by making a network call over the Internet. You can tell xeol not to perform this check by setting the environment variable XEOL_DB_AUTO_UPDATE
to false
.
As long as you place xeol's xeol.db
and metadata.json
files in the cache directory for the expected schema version, xeol has no need to access the network. Additionally, you can get a listing of the database archives available for download from the xeol db list
command in an online environment, download the database archive, transfer it to your offline environment, and use xeol db import <db-archive-path>
to use the given database in an offline capacity.
If you would like to distribute your own xeol databases internally without needing to use db import
manually you can leverage xeol's DB update mechanism. To do this you can craft your own listing.json
file similar to the one found publically (see xeol db list -o raw
for an example of our public listing.json
file) and change the download URL to point to an internal endpoint (e.g. a private S3 bucket, an internal file server, etc). Any internal installation of xeol can receive database updates automatically by configuring the db.update-url
(same as the XEOL_DB_UPDATE_URL
environment variable) to point to the hosted listing.json
file you've crafted.
xeol provides database-specific CLI commands for users that want to control the database from the command line. Here are some of the useful commands provided:
xeol db status
— report the current status of xeol's database (such as its location, build date, and checksum)
xeol db check
— see if updates are available for the database
xeol db update
— ensure the latest database has been downloaded to the cache directory (xeol performs this operation at the beginning of every scan by default)
xeol db list
— download the listing file configured at db.update-url
and show databases that are available for download
xeol db import
— provide xeol with a database archive to explicitly use (useful for offline DB updates)
Find complete information on xeol's database commands by running xeol db --help
.
xeol supplies shell completion through its CLI implementation (cobra). Generate the completion code for your shell by running one of the following commands:
xeol completion <bash|zsh|fish>
go run ./cmd/xeol completion <bash|zsh|fish>
This will output a shell script to STDOUT, which can then be used as a completion script for xeol. Running one of the above commands with the
-h
or --help
flags will provide instructions on how to do that for your chosen shell.
When a container runtime is not present, xeol can still utilize credentials configured in common credential sources (such as ~/.docker/config.json
).
It will pull images from private registries using these credentials. The config file is where your credentials are stored when authenticating with private registries via some command like docker login
.
For more information see the go-containerregistry
documentation.
An example config.json
looks something like this:
// config.json
{
"auths": {
"registry.example.com": {
"username": "AzureDiamond",
"password": "hunter2"
}
}
}
You can run the following command as an example. It details the mount/environment configuration a container needs to access a private registry:
docker run -v ./config.json:/config/config.json -e "DOCKER_CONFIG=/config" noqcks/xeol:latest <private_image>
The below section shows a simple workflow on how to mount this config file as a secret into a container on kubernetes.
-
Create a secret. The value of
config.json
is important. It refers to the specification detailed here. Below this section is thesecret.yaml
file that the pod configuration will consume as a volume. The keyconfig.json
is important. It will end up being the name of the file when mounted into the pod.# secret.yaml apiVersion: v1 kind: Secret metadata: name: registry-config namespace: xeol data: config.json: <base64 encoded config.json>
kubectl apply -f secret.yaml
-
Create your pod running xeol. The env
DOCKER_CONFIG
is important because it advertises where to look for the credential file. In the below example, settingDOCKER_CONFIG=/config
informs xeol that credentials can be found at/config/config.json
. This is why we usedconfig.json
as the key for our secret. When mounted into containers the secrets' key is used as the filename. ThevolumeMounts
section mounts our secret to/config
. Thevolumes
section names our volume and leverages the secret we created in step one.# pod.yaml apiVersion: v1 kind: Pod spec: containers: - image: noqcks/xeol:latest name: xeol-private-registry-demo env: - name: DOCKER_CONFIG value: /config volumeMounts: - mountPath: /config name: registry-config readOnly: true args: - <private_image> volumes: - name: registry-config secret: secretName: registry-config
kubectl apply -f pod.yaml
-
The user can now run
kubectl logs xeol-private-registry-demo
. The logs should show the xeol analysis for the<private_image>
provided in the pod configuration.
Using the above information, users should be able to configure private registry access without having to do so in the xeol
or syft
configuration files.
They will also not be dependent on a docker daemon, (or some other runtime software) for registry configuration and access.
Configuration search paths:
.xeol.yaml
.xeol/config.yaml
~/.xeol.yaml
<XDG_CONFIG_HOME>/xeol/config.yaml
Xeol is pronounced "zee-oh-el", like EOL but with a Z in front :-)
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