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name, description, version, maintainer, category, tags, frameworks, dependencies, references
name description version maintainer category tags frameworks dependencies references
sbom-syft Software Bill of Materials (SBOM) generation using Syft for container images, filesystems, and archives. Detects packages across 28+ ecosystems with multi-format output support (CycloneDX, SPDX, syft-json). Enables vulnerability assessment, license compliance, and supply chain security. Use when: (1) Generating SBOMs for container images or applications, (2) Analyzing software dependencies and packages for vulnerability scanning, (3) Tracking license compliance across dependencies, (4) Integrating SBOM generation into CI/CD for supply chain security, (5) Creating signed SBOM attestations for software provenance. 0.1.0 SirAppSec secsdlc
sbom
syft
supply-chain
dependencies
cyclonedx
spdx
vulnerability-management
license-compliance
NIST
OWASP
tools
docker
https://github.com/anchore/syft
https://anchore.com/sbom/

Syft SBOM Generator

Overview

Syft is a CLI tool and Go library for generating comprehensive Software Bills of Materials (SBOMs) from container images and filesystems. It provides visibility into packages and dependencies across 28+ ecosystems, supporting multiple SBOM formats (CycloneDX, SPDX) for vulnerability management, license compliance, and supply chain security.

Supported Ecosystems

Languages & Package Managers: Alpine (apk), C/C++ (conan), Dart (pub), Debian/Ubuntu (dpkg), Dotnet (deps.json), Go (go.mod), Java (JAR/WAR/EAR/Maven/Gradle), JavaScript (npm/yarn), PHP (composer), Python (pip/poetry/setup.py), Red Hat (RPM), Ruby (gem), Rust (cargo), Swift (cocoapods)

Container & System: OCI images, Docker images, Singularity, container layers, Linux distributions

Quick Start

Generate SBOM for container image:

# Using Docker
docker run --rm -v $(pwd):/out anchore/syft:latest <image> -o cyclonedx-json=/out/sbom.json

# Local installation
syft <image> -o cyclonedx-json=sbom.json

# Examples
syft alpine:latest -o cyclonedx-json
syft docker.io/nginx:latest -o spdx-json
syft dir:/path/to/project -o cyclonedx-json

Core Workflows

Workflow 1: Container Image SBOM Generation

For creating SBOMs of container images:

  1. Identify target container image (local or registry)
  2. Run Syft to generate SBOM:
    syft <image-name:tag> -o cyclonedx-json=sbom-cyclonedx.json
    
  3. Optionally generate multiple formats:
    syft <image-name:tag> \
      -o cyclonedx-json=sbom-cyclonedx.json \
      -o spdx-json=sbom-spdx.json \
      -o syft-json=sbom-syft.json
    
  4. Store SBOM artifacts with image for traceability
  5. Use SBOM for vulnerability scanning with Grype or other tools
  6. Track SBOM versions alongside image releases

Workflow 2: CI/CD Pipeline Integration

Progress: [ ] 1. Add Syft to build pipeline after image creation [ ] 2. Generate SBOM in standard format (CycloneDX or SPDX) [ ] 3. Store SBOM as build artifact [ ] 4. Scan SBOM for vulnerabilities (using Grype or similar) [ ] 5. Fail build on critical vulnerabilities or license violations [ ] 6. Publish SBOM alongside container image [ ] 7. Integrate with vulnerability management platform

Work through each step systematically. Check off completed items.

Workflow 3: Filesystem and Application Scanning

For generating SBOMs from source code or filesystems:

  1. Navigate to project root or specify path
  2. Scan directory structure:
    syft dir:/path/to/project -o cyclonedx-json=app-sbom.json
    
  3. Review detected packages and dependencies
  4. Validate package detection accuracy (check for false positives/negatives)
  5. Configure exclusions if needed (using .syft.yaml)
  6. Generate SBOM for each release version
  7. Track dependency changes between versions

Workflow 4: SBOM Analysis and Vulnerability Scanning

Combining SBOM generation with vulnerability assessment:

  1. Generate SBOM with Syft:
    syft <target> -o cyclonedx-json=sbom.json
    
  2. Scan SBOM for vulnerabilities using Grype:
    grype sbom:sbom.json -o json --file vulnerabilities.json
    
  3. Review vulnerability findings by severity
  4. Filter by exploitability and fix availability
  5. Prioritize remediation based on:
    • CVSS score
    • Active exploitation status
    • Fix availability
    • Dependency depth
  6. Update dependencies and regenerate SBOM
  7. Re-scan to verify vulnerability remediation

Workflow 5: Signed SBOM Attestation

For creating cryptographically signed SBOM attestations:

  1. Install cosign (for signing):
    # macOS
    brew install cosign
    
    # Linux
    wget https://github.com/sigstore/cosign/releases/latest/download/cosign-linux-amd64
    chmod +x cosign-linux-amd64
    mv cosign-linux-amd64 /usr/local/bin/cosign
    
  2. Generate SBOM:
    syft <image> -o cyclonedx-json=sbom.json
    
  3. Create attestation and sign:
    cosign attest --predicate sbom.json --type cyclonedx <image>
    
  4. Verify attestation:
    cosign verify-attestation --type cyclonedx <image>
    
  5. Store signature alongside SBOM for provenance verification

Output Formats

Syft supports multiple SBOM formats for different use cases:

Format Use Case Specification
cyclonedx-json Modern SBOM standard, wide tool support CycloneDX 1.4+
cyclonedx-xml CycloneDX XML variant CycloneDX 1.4+
spdx-json Linux Foundation standard SPDX 2.3
spdx-tag-value SPDX text format SPDX 2.3
syft-json Syft native format (most detail) Syft-specific
syft-text Human-readable console output Syft-specific
github-json GitHub dependency submission GitHub-specific
template Custom Go template output User-defined

Specify with -o flag:

syft <target> -o cyclonedx-json=output.json

Configuration

Create .syft.yaml in project root or home directory:

# Cataloger configuration
package:
  cataloger:
    enabled: true
    scope: all-layers  # Options: all-layers, squashed

  search:
    unindexed-archives: false
    indexed-archives: true

# Exclusions
exclude:
  - "**/test/**"
  - "**/node_modules/**"
  - "**/.git/**"

# Registry authentication
registry:
  insecure-skip-tls-verify: false
  auth:
    - authority: registry.example.com
      username: user
      password: pass

# Output format defaults
output: cyclonedx-json

# Log level
log:
  level: warn  # Options: error, warn, info, debug, trace

Common Patterns

Pattern 1: Multi-Architecture Image Scanning

Scan all architectures of multi-platform images:

# Scan specific architecture
syft --platform linux/amd64 <image> -o cyclonedx-json=sbom-amd64.json
syft --platform linux/arm64 <image> -o cyclonedx-json=sbom-arm64.json

# Or scan manifest list (all architectures)
syft <image> --platform all -o cyclonedx-json

Pattern 2: Private Registry Authentication

Access images from private registries:

# Using Docker credentials
docker login registry.example.com
syft registry.example.com/private/image:tag -o cyclonedx-json

# Using environment variables
export SYFT_REGISTRY_AUTH_AUTHORITY=registry.example.com
export SYFT_REGISTRY_AUTH_USERNAME=user
export SYFT_REGISTRY_AUTH_PASSWORD=pass
syft registry.example.com/private/image:tag -o cyclonedx-json

# Using config file (recommended)
# Add credentials to .syft.yaml

Pattern 3: OCI Archive Scanning

Scan saved container images (OCI or Docker format):

# Save image to archive
docker save nginx:latest -o nginx.tar

# Scan archive
syft oci-archive:nginx.tar -o cyclonedx-json=sbom.json

# Or scan Docker archive
syft docker-archive:nginx.tar -o cyclonedx-json=sbom.json

Pattern 4: Comparing SBOMs Between Versions

Track dependency changes across releases:

# Generate SBOMs for two versions
syft myapp:v1.0 -o syft-json=sbom-v1.0.json
syft myapp:v2.0 -o syft-json=sbom-v2.0.json

# Compare with jq
jq -s '{"added": (.[1].artifacts - .[0].artifacts), "removed": (.[0].artifacts - .[1].artifacts)}' \
  sbom-v1.0.json sbom-v2.0.json

Pattern 5: Filtering SBOM Output

Extract specific package information:

# Generate detailed SBOM
syft <target> -o syft-json=full-sbom.json

# Extract only Python packages
cat full-sbom.json | jq '.artifacts[] | select(.type == "python")'

# Extract packages with specific licenses
cat full-sbom.json | jq '.artifacts[] | select(.licenses[].value == "MIT")'

# Count packages by ecosystem
cat full-sbom.json | jq '.artifacts | group_by(.type) | map({type: .[0].type, count: length})'

Security Considerations

  • Sensitive Data Handling: SBOMs may contain internal package names and versions. Store SBOMs securely and restrict access to authorized personnel
  • Access Control: Limit SBOM generation and access to build systems. Use read-only credentials for registry access
  • Audit Logging: Log SBOM generation events, distribution, and access for compliance tracking
  • Compliance: SBOMs support compliance with Executive Order 14028 (Software Supply Chain Security), NIST guidelines, and OWASP recommendations
  • Safe Defaults: Use signed attestations for production SBOMs to ensure integrity and provenance

Integration Points

CI/CD Integration

GitHub Actions:

- name: Generate SBOM with Syft
  uses: anchore/sbom-action@v0
  with:
    image: ${{ env.IMAGE_NAME }}:${{ github.sha }}
    format: cyclonedx-json
    output-file: sbom.json

- name: Upload SBOM
  uses: actions/upload-artifact@v3
  with:
    name: sbom
    path: sbom.json

GitLab CI:

sbom-generation:
  image: anchore/syft:latest
  script:
    - syft $CI_REGISTRY_IMAGE:$CI_COMMIT_SHA -o cyclonedx-json=sbom.json
  artifacts:
    reports:
      cyclonedx: sbom.json

Jenkins:

stage('Generate SBOM') {
  steps {
    sh 'syft ${IMAGE_NAME}:${BUILD_NUMBER} -o cyclonedx-json=sbom.json'
    archiveArtifacts artifacts: 'sbom.json'
  }
}

Vulnerability Scanning

Integrate with Grype for vulnerability scanning:

# Generate SBOM and scan in one pipeline
syft <target> -o cyclonedx-json=sbom.json
grype sbom:sbom.json

SBOM Distribution

Attach SBOMs to container images:

# Using ORAS
oras attach <image> --artifact-type application/vnd.cyclonedx+json sbom.json

# Using Docker manifest
# Store SBOM as additional layer or separate artifact

Advanced Usage

Custom Template Output

Create custom output formats using Go templates:

# Create template file
cat > custom-template.tmpl <<'EOF'
{{- range .Artifacts}}
{{.Name}}@{{.Version}} ({{.Type}})
{{- end}}
EOF

# Use template
syft <target> -o template -t custom-template.tmpl

Scanning Specific Layers

Analyze specific layers in container images:

# Squashed view (default - final filesystem state)
syft <image> --scope squashed -o cyclonedx-json

# All layers (every layer's packages)
syft <image> --scope all-layers -o cyclonedx-json

Environment Variable Configuration

Configure Syft via environment variables:

export SYFT_SCOPE=all-layers
export SYFT_OUTPUT=cyclonedx-json
export SYFT_LOG_LEVEL=debug
export SYFT_EXCLUDE="**/test/**,**/node_modules/**"

syft <target>

Troubleshooting

Issue: Missing Packages in SBOM

Solution: Enable all-layers scope or check for package manager files:

syft <target> --scope all-layers -o syft-json

Verify package manifest files exist (package.json, requirements.txt, go.mod, etc.)

Issue: Registry Authentication Failure

Solution: Ensure Docker credentials are configured or use explicit auth:

docker login <registry>
# Then run syft
syft <registry>/<image> -o cyclonedx-json

Issue: Large SBOM Size

Solution: Use squashed scope and exclude test/dev dependencies:

# In .syft.yaml
package:
  cataloger:
    scope: squashed
exclude:
  - "**/test/**"
  - "**/node_modules/**"
  - "**/.git/**"

Issue: Slow Scanning Performance

Solution: Disable unindexed archive scanning for faster results:

# In .syft.yaml
package:
  search:
    unindexed-archives: false

License Compliance

Extract license information from SBOM:

# Generate SBOM
syft <target> -o syft-json=sbom.json

# Extract unique licenses
cat sbom.json | jq -r '.artifacts[].licenses[].value' | sort -u

# Find packages with specific licenses
cat sbom.json | jq '.artifacts[] | select(.licenses[].value | contains("GPL"))'

# Generate license report
cat sbom.json | jq -r '.artifacts[] | "\(.name):\(.licenses[].value)"' | sort

Vulnerability Management Workflow

Complete workflow integrating SBOM generation with vulnerability management:

Progress: [ ] 1. Generate SBOM for application/container [ ] 2. Scan SBOM for known vulnerabilities [ ] 3. Classify vulnerabilities by severity and exploitability [ ] 4. Check for available patches and updates [ ] 5. Update vulnerable dependencies [ ] 6. Regenerate SBOM after updates [ ] 7. Re-scan to confirm vulnerability remediation [ ] 8. Document accepted risks for unfixable vulnerabilities [ ] 9. Schedule periodic SBOM regeneration and scanning

Work through each step systematically. Check off completed items.

References