LicenseFinder works with your package managers to find dependencies, detect the licenses of the packages in them, compare those licenses against a user-defined whitelist, and give you an actionable exception report.
- code: https://github.com/pivotal/LicenseFinder
- support:
- backlog: https://www.pivotaltracker.com/s/projects/234851
- Ruby Gems (via
bundler
) - Python Eggs (via
pip
) - Node.js (via
npm
) - Bower
- Nuget (without license discovery)
- Godep
- Go workspace (via a
.envrc
file) - Go submodules
- Java (via
maven
) - Java (via
gradle
)
- Erlang (via
rebar
) - Objective-C (+ CocoaPods)
License Finder requires Ruby 1.9.3 or greater to run. If you have an older version of Ruby installed, you can update via Homebrew:
$ ruby -e "$(curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Homebrew/install/master/install)"
then:
$ brew install ruby
The easiest way to use license_finder
is to install it as a command
line tool, like brew, awk, gem or bundler:
$ gem install license_finder
Though it's less preferable, if you are using bundler in a Ruby
project, you can add license_finder
to your Gemfile:
gem 'license_finder', :group => :development
This approach helps you remember to install license_finder
, but can
pull in unwanted dependencies, including bundler
. To mitigate this
problem, see Excluding Dependencies.
Make sure your dependencies are installed (with your package manager's install command: bundle install
, npm install
, etc.)
The first time you run license_finder
it will list all your project's packages.
$ license_finder
Or, if you installed with bundler:
$ bundle exec license_finder
The output will report that none of your packages have been
approved. Over time you will tell license_finder
which packages
are approved, so when you run this command in the future, it will
report current action items; i.e., packages that are new or have
never been approved.
If you don't wish to see progressive output "dots", use the --quiet
option.
If you'd like to see debugging output, use the --debug
option. license_finder
will then output info about packages, their
dependencies, and where and how each license was discovered. This can
be useful when you need to track down an unexpected package or
license.
Run license_finder help
to see other available commands, and
license_finder help [COMMAND]
for detailed help on a specific
command.
license_finder
will find and include packages for all supported
languages, as long as that language has a package definition in the project directory:
Gemfile
(forbundler
)requirements.txt
(forpip
)package.json
(fornpm
)pom.xml
(formaven
)build.gradle
(forgradle
)settings.gradle
that specifiesrootProject.buildFileName
(forgradle
)bower.json
(forbower
)Podfile
(for CocoaPods)rebar.config
(forrebar
)packages/
directory (forNuget
)
license_finder
will return a non-zero exit status if there are unapproved
dependencies. This can be useful for inclusion in a CI environment to alert you
if someone adds an unapproved dependency to the project.
license_finder
will inform you whenever you have an unapproved dependency.
If your business decides this is an acceptable risk, the easiest way to approve
the dependency is by running license_finder approval add
.
For example, let's assume you've added the awesome_gpl_gem
to your Gemfile, which license_finder
reports is unapproved:
$ license_finder
Dependencies that need approval:
awesome_gpl_gem, 1.0.0, GPL
Your business tells you that in this case, it's acceptable to use this gem. You now run:
$ license_finder approval add awesome_gpl_gem
If you rerun license_finder
, you should no longer see
awesome_gpl_gem
in the output.
To record who approved the dependency and why:
$ license_finder approval add awesome_gpl_gem --who CTO --why "Go ahead"
Approving packages one-by-one can be tedious. Usually your business has
blanket policies about which packages are approved. To tell license_finder
that any package with the MIT license should be approved, run:
$ license_finder whitelist add MIT
Any current or future packages with the MIT license will be excluded from the
output of license_finder
.
You can also record --who
and --why
when changing the whitelist, or making
any other decision about your project.
Any decisions you make about approvals will be recorded in a YAML file named
doc/dependency_decisions.yml
.
This file must be committed to version control. Rarely, you will have to manually resolve conflicts in it. In this situation, keep in mind that each decision has an associated timestamp, and the decisions are processed top-to-bottom, with later decisions overwriting or appending to earlier decisions.
You could expect license_finder
, which is an alias for license_finder action_items
to output something like the following on a Rails project where
MIT had been whitelisted:
Dependencies that need approval:
highline, 1.6.14, ruby
json, 1.7.5, ruby
mime-types, 1.19, ruby
rails, 3.2.8, unknown
rdoc, 3.12, unknown
rubyzip, 0.9.9, ruby
xml-simple, 1.1.1, unknown
You can customize the format of the output in the same way that you customize
output from report
.
The license_finder report
command will output human-readable reports that you
could send to your non-technical business partners, lawyers, etc. You can
choose the format of the report (text, csv, html or markdown); see
license_finder --help report
for details. The output is sent to STDOUT, so
you can save the reports wherever you want them. You can commit them to
version control if you like.
The HTML report generated by license_finder report --format html
summarizes
all of your project's dependencies and includes information about which need to
be approved. The project name at the top of the report can be set with
license_finder project_name add
.
See CONTRIBUTING.md for advice about adding and customizing reports.
When license_finder
reports that a dependency's license is 'unknown',
you should manually research what the actual license is. When you
have established the real license, you can record it with:
$ license_finder licenses add my_unknown_dependency MIT
This command would assign the MIT license to the dependency
my_unknown_dependency
.
Adding Hidden Dependencies
license_finder
can track dependencies that your package managers
don't know about (JS libraries that don't appear in your
Gemfile/requirements.txt/package.json, etc.)
$ license_finder dependencies add my_js_dep MIT 0.1.2
Run license_finder dependencies help
for
additional documentation about managing these dependencies.
license_finder
cannot automatically detect when one of these
dependencies has been removed from your project, so you can use:
$ license_finder dependencies remove my_js_dep
Sometimes a project will have development or test dependencies which
you don't want to track. You can exclude theses dependencies by running
license_finder ignored_groups
. (Currently this only works for packages
managed by Bundler, NPM, and Nuget.)
On rare occasions a package manager will report an individual dependency
that you want to exclude from all reports, even though it is approved.
You can exclude an individual dependency by running
license_finder ignored_dependencies
. Think carefully before adding
dependencies to this list. A likely item to exclude is bundler
,
since it is a common dependency whose version changes from machine to
machine. Adding it to the ignored_dependencies
would prevent it
(and its oscillating versions) from appearing in reports.
Some projects will have a list of licenses that cannot be used. You can add
these licenses to the blacklist license_finder blacklist add
. Any dependency
that has exclusively blacklisted licenses will always appear in the action
items, even if someone attempts to manually approve or whitelist it. However,
if a dependency has even one license outside of the blacklist, it can still be
manually approved or whitelisted.
Be default, license_finder
expects the decisions file to be stored at
doc/dependency_decisions.yml
. All commands can be passed --decisions_file
to override this location.
If you have a gradle project, you can invoke gradle with a custom script by
passing (for example) --gradle_command gradlew
to license_finder
or
license_finder report
.
Similarly you can invoke a custom rebar script with --rebar_command rebar2
.
If you store rebar dependencies in a custom directory (by setting deps_dir
in
rebar.config
), set --rebar_deps_dir
.
It may be difficult to remember to pass command line options to every command.
In some of these cases you can store default values in a YAML formatted config
file. license_finder
looks for this file in config/license_finder.yml
.
As an example, the file might look like this:
---
decisions_file: './some_path/decisions.yml'
gradle_command: './gradlew'
rebar_command: './rebarw'
rebar_deps_dir: './rebar_deps'
license_finder
supports both Gradle 1.x and Gradle 2.x. You need to have installed
the license-gradle-plugin in your project:
https://github.com/hierynomus/license-gradle-plugin
By default, license_finder
will report on Gradle's "runtime" dependencies. If
you want to generate a report for some other dependency configuration (e.g.
Android projects will sometimes specify their meaningful dependencies in the
"compile" group), you can specify it in your project's build.gradle
:
// Must come *after* the 'apply plugin: license' line
downloadLicenses {
dependencyConfiguration "compile"
}
license_finder
supports Maven.
license_finder
requires ruby >= 1.9, or jruby.
To upgrade from license_finder
version 1.2 to 2.0, see
license_finder_upgrade
.
To upgrade to 2.0 from a version lower than 1.2, first upgrade to 1.2, and run
license_finder
at least once. This will ensure that the license_finder
database is in a state which license_finder_upgrade
understands.
Please add a license to your package specs! Most packaging systems allow for the specification of one or more licenses.
For example, Ruby Gems can specify a license by name:
Gem::Specification.new do |s|
s.name = "my_great_gem"
s.license = "MIT"
end
And save a LICENSE
file which contains your license text in your repo.
- Send an email to the list: [email protected]
- View the project backlog at Pivotal Tracker: https://www.pivotaltracker.com/s/projects/234851
See CONTRIBUTING.md.
LicenseFinder is released under the MIT License. http://www.opensource.org/licenses/mit-license