Skip to content

A Python library to parse, validate and create SPDX documents.

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

xavierfigueroav/tools-python

 
 

Repository files navigation

Python SPDX Library to parse, validate and create SPDX documents

Linux macOS Windows
Linux build status macOS build status Windows build status

This library implements an SPDX tag/value and RDF parser, validator and handler in Python. This is the result of an initial GSoC contribution by @ah450 (or https://github.com/a-h-i) and is maintained by a community of SPDX adopters and enthusiasts.

Home: https://github.com/spdx/tools-python

Issues: https://github.com/spdx/tools-python/issues

Pypi: https://pypi.python.org/pypi/spdx-tools

License

Apache-2.0

Features

  • API to create and manipulate SPDX documents.
  • Parse and create Tag/Value, RDF, JSON, YAML, XML format SPDX files

TODOs

  • Update to full SPDX v2.1
  • Add to full license expression support

How to use

Example tag/value parsing usage:

    from spdx.parsers.tagvalue import Parser
    from spdx.parsers.tagvaluebuilders import Builder
    from spdx.parsers.loggers import StandardLogger
    p = Parser(Builder(), StandardLogger())
    p.build()
    # data is a string containing the SPDX file.
    document, error = p.parse(data)

The examples directory contains several code samples. Here some of them:

  • parse_tv.py is an example tag/value parsing usage. Try running python parse_tv.py ../data/SPDXSimpleTag.tag

  • write_tv.py provides an example of writing tag/value files. Run python write_tv.py sample.tag to test it.

  • pp_tv.py demonstrates how to pretty-print a tag/value file. To test it run python pp_tv.py ../data/SPDXTagExample.tag pretty.tag.

  • parse_rdf.py demonstrates how to parse an RDF file and print out document information. To test it run python parse_rdf.py ../data/SPDXRdfExample.rdf

  • rdf_to_tv.py demonstrates how to convert an RDF file to a tag/value one. To test it run python rdf_to_tv.py ../data/SPDXRdfExample.rdf converted.tag

  • pp_rdf.py demonstrates how to pretty-print an RDF file, to test it run python pp_rdf.py ../data/SPDXRdfExample.rdf pretty.rdf

Installation

As always you should work in a virtualenv or venv. You can install a local clone of this repo with yourenv/bin/pip install . or install from PyPI with yourenv/bin/pip install spdx-tools. Note that on Windows it would be Scripts instead of bin.

How to run tests

From the project root directory run: python setup.py test. You can use another test runner such as pytest or nose at your preference.

Development process

We use the GitHub flow that is described here: https://guides.github.com/introduction/flow/

So, whenever we have to make some changes to the code, we should follow these steps:

  1. Create a new branch: git checkout -b fix-or-improve-something
  2. Make some changes and the first commit(s) to the branch: git commit --signoff -m 'What changes we did'
  3. Push the branch to GitHub: git push origin fix-or-improve-something
  4. Make a pull request on GitHub.
  5. Continue making more changes and commits on the branch, with git commit --signoff and git push.
  6. When done, write a comment on the PR asking for a code review.
  7. Some other developer will review your changes and accept your PR. The merge should be done with rebase, if possible, or with squash.
  8. The temporary branch on GitHub should be deleted (there is a button for deleting it).
  9. Delete the local branch as well:
    git checkout master
    git pull -p
    git branch -a
    git branch -d fix-or-improve-something
    

Besides this, another requirement is that every change should be made to fix or close an issue: https://guides.github.com/features/issues/ If there is no issue for the changes that you want to make, create first an issue about it that describes what needs to be done, assign it to yourself, and then start working for closing it.

Dependencies

Support

About

A Python library to parse, validate and create SPDX documents.

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Python 100.0%