License Compliance

If you’re using GitLab CI/CD, you can use License Compliance to search your project’s dependencies for their licenses. You can then decide whether to allow or deny the use of each license. For example, if your application uses an external (open source) library whose license is incompatible with yours, then you can deny the use of that license.

You can take advantage of License Compliance by either:

The License Finder scan tool runs as part of the CI/CD pipeline, and detects the licenses in use. GitLab checks the License Compliance report, compares the licenses between the source and target branches, and shows the information right on the merge request. Denied licenses are indicated by a x red icon next to them as well as new licenses that need a decision from you. In addition, you can manually allow or deny licenses in your project’s license compliance policy section. If a denied license is detected in a new commit, GitLab blocks any merge requests containing that commit and instructs the developer to remove the license.

noteIf the license compliance report doesn’t have anything to compare to, no information is displayed in the merge request area. That is the case when you add the license_scanning job in your .gitlab-ci.yml for the first time. Consecutive merge requests have something to compare to and the license compliance report is shown properly.

License Compliance Widget

You can click on a license to see more information.

When GitLab detects a Denied license, you can view it in the license list.

License List

You can view and modify existing policies from the policies tab.

Edit Policy

Supported languages and package managers

The following languages and package managers are supported.

Java 8 and Gradle 1.x projects are not supported. The minimum supported version of Maven is 3.2.5.

Language Package managers Notes
JavaScript Bower, npm  
Go Godep, go mod  
Java Gradle, Maven  
.NET NuGet The .NET Framework is supported via the mono project. There are, however, some limitations. The scanner doesn’t support Windows-specific dependencies and doesn’t report dependencies of your project’s listed dependencies. Also, the scanner always marks detected licenses for all dependencies as unknown.
Python pip Python is supported through requirements.txt and Pipfile.lock.
Ruby gem  

Experimental support

The following languages and package managers are supported experimentally. The reported licenses might be incomplete or inaccurate.

Language Package managers
JavaScript Yarn
Go go get, gvt, glide, dep, trash, govendor
Erlang Rebar
Objective-C, Swift Carthage, CocoaPods v0.39 and below
Elixir Mix
C++/C Conan
Scala sbt
Rust Cargo
PHP Composer

Requirements

To run a License Compliance scanning job, you need GitLab Runner with the docker executor.

Configuration

For GitLab 12.8 and later, to enable License Compliance, you must include the License-Scanning.gitlab-ci.yml template that’s provided as a part of your GitLab installation. For older versions of GitLab from 11.9 to 12.7, you must include the License-Management.gitlab-ci.yml template. For GitLab versions earlier than 11.9, you can copy and use the job as defined that template.

Add the following to your .gitlab-ci.yml file:

include:
  - template: Security/License-Scanning.gitlab-ci.yml

The included template creates a license_scanning job in your CI/CD pipeline and scans your dependencies to find their licenses.

noteBefore GitLab 12.8, the license_scanning job was named license_management. GitLab 13.0 removes the license_management job, so you must migrate to the license_scanning job and use the new License-Scanning.gitlab-ci.yml template.

The results are saved as a License Compliance report artifact that you can later download and analyze. Due to implementation limitations, we always take the latest License Compliance artifact available. Behind the scenes, the GitLab License Compliance Docker image is used to detect the languages/frameworks and in turn analyzes the licenses.

The License Compliance settings can be changed through CI/CD variables by using the variables parameter in .gitlab-ci.yml.

When License Compliance runs

When using the GitLab License-Scanning.gitlab-ci.yml template, the License Compliance job doesn’t wait for other stages to complete.

Available CI/CD variables

License Compliance can be configured using CI/CD variables.

CI/CD variable Required Description
ADDITIONAL_CA_CERT_BUNDLE no Bundle of trusted CA certificates (currently supported in Pip, Pipenv, Maven, Gradle, Yarn, and npm projects).
ASDF_JAVA_VERSION no Version of Java to use for the scan.
ASDF_NODEJS_VERSION no Version of Node.js to use for the scan.
ASDF_PYTHON_VERSION no Version of Python to use for the scan.
ASDF_RUBY_VERSION no Version of Ruby to use for the scan.
GRADLE_CLI_OPTS no Additional arguments for the Gradle executable. If not supplied, defaults to --exclude-task=test.
LICENSE_FINDER_CLI_OPTS no Additional arguments for the license_finder executable. For example, if you have multiple projects in nested directories, you can update your .gitlab-ci-yml template to specify a recursive scan, like LICENSE_FINDER_CLI_OPTS: '--recursive'.
LM_JAVA_VERSION no Version of Java. If set to 11, Maven and Gradle use Java 11 instead of Java 8.
LM_PYTHON_VERSION no Version of Python. If set to 3, dependencies are installed using Python 3 instead of Python 2.7.
MAVEN_CLI_OPTS no Additional arguments for the mvn executable. If not supplied, defaults to -DskipTests.
PIP_INDEX_URL no Base URL of Python Package Index (default: https://pypi.org/simple/).
SECURE_ANALYZERS_PREFIX no Set the Docker registry base address to download the analyzer from.
SETUP_CMD no Custom setup for the dependency installation (experimental).

Installing custom dependencies

Introduced in GitLab Ultimate 11.4.

The license_finder image already embeds many auto-detection scripts, languages, and packages. Nevertheless, it’s almost impossible to cover all cases for all projects. That’s why sometimes it’s necessary to install extra packages, or to have extra steps in the project automated setup, like the download and installation of a certificate. For that, a SETUP_CMD CI/CD variable can be passed to the container, with the required commands to run before the license detection.

If present, this variable overrides the setup step necessary to install all the packages of your application (e.g.: for a project with a Gemfile, the setup step could be bundle install).

For example:

include:
  - template: Security/License-Scanning.gitlab-ci.yml

variables:
  SETUP_CMD: sh my-custom-install-script.sh

In this example, my-custom-install-script.sh is a shell script at the root directory of your project.

Overriding the template

cautionBeginning in GitLab 13.0, the use of only and except is no longer supported. When overriding the template, you must use rules instead.

If you want to override the job definition (for example, change properties like variables or dependencies), you need to declare a license_scanning job after the template inclusion and specify any additional keys under it. For example:

include:
  - template: Security/License-Scanning.gitlab-ci.yml

license_scanning:
  variables:
    CI_DEBUG_TRACE: "true"

Configuring Maven projects

The License Compliance tool provides a MAVEN_CLI_OPTS CI/CD variable which can hold the command line arguments to pass to the mvn install command which is executed under the hood. Feel free to use it for the customization of Maven execution. For example:

include:
  - template: Security/License-Scanning.gitlab-ci.yml

license_scanning:
  variables:
    MAVEN_CLI_OPTS: --debug

mvn install runs through all of the build life cycle stages prior to install, including test. Running unit tests is not directly necessary for the license scanning purposes and consumes time, so it’s skipped by having the default value of MAVEN_CLI_OPTS as -DskipTests. If you want to supply custom MAVEN_CLI_OPTS and skip tests at the same time, don’t forget to explicitly add -DskipTests to your options. If you still need to run tests during mvn install, add -DskipTests=false to MAVEN_CLI_OPTS.

Using private Maven repositories

If you have a private Maven repository which requires login credentials, you can use the MAVEN_CLI_OPTS CI/CD variable.

Read more on how to use private Maven repositories.

You can also use MAVEN_CLI_OPTS to connect to a trusted Maven repository that uses a self-signed or internally trusted certificate. For example:

include:
  - template: Security/License-Scanning.gitlab-ci.yml

license_scanning:
  variables:
    MAVEN_CLI_OPTS: -Dmaven.wagon.http.ssl.allowall=true -Dmaven.wagon.http.ssl.ignore.validity.dates=true -Dmaven.wagon.http.ssl.insecure=true

Alternatively, you can use a Java key store to verify the TLS connection. For instructions on how to generate a key store file, see the Maven Guide to Remote repository access through authenticated HTTPS.

Selecting the version of Python

Version history

License Compliance uses Python 3.8 and pip 19.1 by default. If your project requires Python 2, you can switch to Python 2.7 and pip 10.0 by setting the LM_PYTHON_VERSION CI/CD variable to 2.

include:
  - template: Security/License-Scanning.gitlab-ci.yml

license_scanning:
  variables:
    LM_PYTHON_VERSION: 2

Custom root certificates for Python

You can supply a custom root certificate to complete TLS verification by using the ADDITIONAL_CA_CERT_BUNDLE CI/CD variable.

Using private Python repositories

If you have a private Python repository you can use the PIP_INDEX_URL CI/CD variable to specify its location.

Configuring npm projects

You can configure npm projects by using an .npmrc file.

Using private npm registries

If you have a private npm registry you can use the registry setting to specify its location.

For example:

registry = https://npm.example.com

Custom root certificates for npm

You can supply a custom root certificate to complete TLS verification by using the ADDITIONAL_CA_CERT_BUNDLE CI/CD variable.

To disable TLS verification you can provide the strict-ssl setting.

For example:

strict-ssl = false

Configuring Yarn projects

You can configure Yarn projects by using a .yarnrc.yml file.

Using private Yarn registries

If you have a private Yarn registry you can use the npmRegistryServer setting to specify its location.

For example:

npmRegistryServer: "https://npm.example.com"

Custom root certificates for Yarn

You can supply a custom root certificate to complete TLS verification by using the ADDITIONAL_CA_CERT_BUNDLE CI/CD variable.

Configuring Bower projects

You can configure Bower projects by using a .bowerrc file.

Using private Bower registries

If you have a private Bower registry you can use the registry setting to specify its location.

For example:

{
  "registry": "https://registry.bower.io"
}

Custom root certificates for Bower

You can supply a custom root certificate to complete TLS verification by using the ADDITIONAL_CA_CERT_BUNDLE CI/CD variable, or by specifying a ca setting in a .bowerrc file.

Configuring Bundler projects

Using private Bundler registries

If you have a private Bundler registry you can use the source setting to specify its location.

For example:

source "https://gems.example.com"

Custom root certificates for Bundler

You can supply a custom root certificate to complete TLS verification by using the ADDITIONAL_CA_CERT_BUNDLE CI/CD variable, or by specifying a BUNDLE_SSL_CA_CERT variable in the job definition.

Configuring Cargo projects

Using private Cargo registries

If you have a private Cargo registry you can use the registries setting to specify its location.

For example:

[registries]
my-registry = { index = "https://my-intranet:8080/git/index" }

Custom root certificates for Cargo

To supply a custom root certificate to complete TLS verification, do one of the following:

Configuring Composer projects

Using private Composer registries

If you have a private Composer registry you can use the repositories setting to specify its location.

For example:

{
  "repositories": [
    { "packagist.org": false },
    {
      "type": "composer",
      "url": "https://composer.example.com"
    }
  ],
  "require": {
    "monolog/monolog": "1.0.*"
  }
}

Custom root certificates for Composer

You can supply a custom root certificate to complete TLS verification by using the ADDITIONAL_CA_CERT_BUNDLE CI/CD variable, or by specifying a COMPOSER_CAFILE variable in the job definition.

Configuring Conan projects

You can configure Conan projects by adding a .conan directory to your project root. The project root serves as the CONAN_USER_HOME.

Consult the Conan documentation for a list of settings that you can apply.

The license_scanning job runs in a Debian 10 Docker image. The supplied image ships with some build tools such as CMake and GCC. However, not all project types are supported by default. To install additional tools needed to compile dependencies, use a before_script to install the necessary build tools using the apt package manager. For a comprehensive list, consult the Conan documentation.

The default Conan configuration sets CONAN_LOGIN_USERNAME to ci_user, and binds CONAN_PASSWORD to the CI_JOB_TOKEN for the running job. This allows Conan projects to fetch packages from a GitLab Conan Repository if a GitLab remote is specified in the .conan/remotes.json file.

To override the default credentials specify a CONAN_LOGIN_USERNAME_{REMOTE_NAME} matching the name of the remote specified in the .conan/remotes.json file.

noteMSBuild projects aren’t supported. The license_scanning image ships with Mono and MSBuild. Additional setup may be required to build packages for this project configuration.

Using private Conan registries

By default, Conan uses the conan-center remote. For example:

{
 "remotes": [
  {
   "name": "conan-center",
   "url": "https://conan.bintray.com",
   "verify_ssl": true
  }
 ]
}

To fetch dependencies from an alternate remote, specify that remote in a .conan/remotes.json. For example:

{
 "remotes": [
  {
   "name": "gitlab",
   "url": "https://gitlab.com/api/v4/packages/conan",
   "verify_ssl": true
  }
 ]
}

If credentials are required to authenticate then you can configure a protected CI/CD variable following the naming convention described in the CONAN_LOGIN_USERNAME documentation.

Custom root certificates for Conan

You can provide custom certificates by adding a .conan/cacert.pem file to the project root and setting CA_CERT_PATH to .conan/cacert.pem.

If you specify the ADDITIONAL_CA_CERT_BUNDLE CI/CD variable, this variable’s X.509 certificates are installed in the Docker image’s default trust store and Conan is configured to use this as the default CA_CERT_PATH.

Configuring Go projects

To configure Go modules based projects, specify CI/CD variables in the license_scanning job’s variables section in .gitlab-ci.yml.

If a project has vendored its modules, then the combination of the vendor directory and mod.sum file are used to detect the software licenses associated with the Go module dependencies.

Using private Go registries

You can use the GOPRIVATE and GOPROXY environment variables to control where modules are sourced from. Alternatively, you can use go mod vendor to vendor a project’s modules.

Custom root certificates for Go

You can specify the -insecure flag by exporting the GOFLAGS environment variable. For example:

include:
  - template: Security/License-Scanning.gitlab-ci.yml

license_scanning:
  variables:
    GOFLAGS: '-insecure'

Using private NuGet registries

If you have a private NuGet registry you can add it as a source by adding it to the packageSources section of a nuget.config file.

For example:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<configuration>
  <packageSources>
    <clear />
    <add key="custom" value="https://nuget.example.com/v3/index.json" />
  </packageSources>
</configuration>

Custom root certificates for NuGet

You can supply a custom root certificate to complete TLS verification by using the ADDITIONAL_CA_CERT_BUNDLE CI/CD variable.

Migration from license_management to license_scanning

cautionThe license_management job was deprecated in GitLab 12.8. The License-Management.gitlab-ci.yml template was removed from GitLab 14.0.

In GitLab 12.8 a new name for license_management job was introduced. This change was made to improve clarity around the purpose of the scan, which is to scan and collect the types of licenses present in a projects dependencies. GitLab 13.0 drops support for license_management. If you’re using a custom setup for License Compliance, you’re required to update your CI configuration accordingly:

  1. Change the CI template to License-Scanning.gitlab-ci.yml.
  2. Change the job name to license_scanning (if you mention it in .gitlab-ci.yml).
  3. Change the artifact name to license_scanning, and the filename to gl-license-scanning-report.json (if you mention it in .gitlab-ci.yml).

For example, the following .gitlab-ci.yml:

include:
  - template: License-Management.gitlab-ci.yml

license_management:
  artifacts:
    reports:
      license_management: gl-license-management-report.json

Should be changed to:

include:
  - template: Security/License-Scanning.gitlab-ci.yml

license_scanning:
  artifacts:
    reports:
      license_scanning: gl-license-scanning-report.json

If you use the license_management artifact in GitLab 13.0 or later, the License Compliance job generates this error:

WARNING: Uploading artifacts to coordinator... failed id=:id responseStatus=400 Bad Request status=400 Bad Request token=:sha

FATAL: invalid_argument

If you encounter this error, follow the instructions described in this section.

Running License Compliance in an offline environment

For self-managed GitLab instances in an environment with limited, restricted, or intermittent access to external resources through the internet, some adjustments are required for the License Compliance job to successfully run. For more information, see Offline environments.

Requirements for offline License Compliance

To use License Compliance in an offline environment, you need:

noteGitLab Runner has a default pull policy of always, meaning the runner tries to pull Docker images from the GitLab container registry even if a local copy is available. The GitLab Runner pull_policy can be set to if-not-present in an offline environment if you prefer using only locally available Docker images. However, we recommend keeping the pull policy setting to always if not in an offline environment, as this enables the use of updated scanners in your CI/CD pipelines.

Make GitLab License Compliance analyzer images available inside your Docker registry

For License Compliance with all supported languages and package managers, import the following default License Compliance analyzer images from registry.gitlab.com to your offline local Docker container registry:

registry.gitlab.com/gitlab-org/security-products/analyzers/license-finder:latest

The process for importing Docker images into a local offline Docker registry depends on your network security policy. Please consult your IT staff to find an accepted and approved process by which external resources can be imported or temporarily accessed. Note that these scanners are updated periodically with new definitions, so consider if you are able to make periodic updates yourself.

For details on saving and transporting Docker images as a file, see Docker’s documentation on docker save, docker load, docker export, and docker import.

Set License Compliance CI/CD variables to use local License Compliance analyzers

Add the following configuration to your .gitlab-ci.yml file. You must replace image to refer to the License Compliance Docker image hosted on your local Docker container registry:

include:
  - template: Security/License-Scanning.gitlab-ci.yml

license_scanning:
  image:
    name: localhost:5000/analyzers/license-management:latest

The License Compliance job should now use local copies of the License Compliance analyzers to scan your code and generate security reports, without requiring internet access.

Additional configuration may be needed for connecting to private registries for:

SPDX license list name matching

Prior to GitLab 13.3, offline environments required an exact name match for project policies. In GitLab 13.3 and later, GitLab matches the name of project policies with identifiers from the SPDX license list. A local copy of the SPDX license list is distributed with the GitLab instance. If needed, the GitLab instance’s administrator can manually update it with a Rake task.

License list

The License list allows you to see your project’s licenses and key details about them.

In order for the licenses to appear under the license list, the following requirements must be met:

  1. The License Compliance CI job must be configured for your project.
  2. Your project must use at least one of the supported languages and package managers.

Once everything is set, navigate to Security & Compliance > License Compliance in your project’s sidebar, and the licenses are displayed, where:

  • Name: The name of the license.
  • Component: The components which have this license.
  • Policy Violation: The license has a license policy marked as Deny.

License List

Policies

Policies allow you to specify licenses that are allowed or denied in a project. If a denied license is newly committed it blocks the merge request and instructs the developer to remove it. Note, the merge request is not able to be merged until the denied license is removed. You may add a License-Check approval rule, which enables a designated approver that can approve and then merge a merge request with denied license.

Merge Request with denied licenses

The Policies tab in the project’s license compliance section displays your project’s license policies. Project maintainers can specify policies in this section.

Edit Policy Add Policy

Developers of the project can view the policies configured in a project.

View Policies

Enabling License Approvals within a project

License-Check is a merge request approval rule you can enable to allow an individual or group to approve a merge request that contains a denied license.

You can enable License-Check one of two ways:

  1. Navigate to your project’s Settings > General and expand Merge request approvals.
  2. Click Enable or Edit.
  3. Add or change the Rule name to License-Check (case sensitive).

License Check Approver Rule

  • Create an approval group in the project policies section for License Compliance. You must set this approval group’s number of approvals required to greater than zero. Once you enable this group in your project, the approval rule is enabled for all merge requests.

Any code changes cause the approvals required to reset.

An approval is required when a license report:

  • Contains a dependency that includes a software license that is denied.
  • Is not generated during pipeline execution.

An approval is optional when a license report:

  • Contains no software license violations.
  • Contains only new licenses that are allowed or unknown.

Troubleshooting

ASDF_PYTHON_VERSION does not automatically install the version

Defining a non-latest Python version in ASDF_PYTHON_VERSION doesn’t have it automatically installed. If your project requires a non-latest version of Python:

  1. Define the required version by setting the ASDF_PYTHON_VERSION CI/CD variable.
  2. Pass a custom script to the SETUP_CMD CI/CD variable to install the required version and dependencies.

For example:

include:
  - template: Security/License-Scanning.gitlab-ci.yml

license_scanning:
    SETUP_CMD: ./setup.sh
    ASDF_PYTHON_VERSION: "3.7.2"
  before_script:
    - echo "asdf install python 3.7.2 && pip install -r requirements.txt" > setup.sh
    - chmod +x setup.sh
    - apt-get -y update
    - apt-get -y install build-essential libssl-dev zlib1g-dev libbz2-dev libreadline-dev libsqlite3-dev wget curl llvm libncurses5-dev libncursesw5-dev xz-utils tk-dev libffi-dev liblzma-dev python-openssl git

ERROR -- : asdf: No preset version installed for command

This error occurs when the version of the tools used by your project do not match the version of the pre-installed tools available in the license_scanning Docker image. The license_scanning job uses asdf-vm to activate the appropriate version of a tool that your project relies on. For example, if your project relies on a specific version of Node.js or any other supported tool you can specify the desired version by adding a .tool-versions file to the project or using the appropriate ASDF_<tool>_VERSION environment variable to activate the appropriate version.

For example, the following .tool-versions file activates version 12.16.3 of Node.js and version 2.7.2 of Ruby.

nodejs 12.16.3
ruby 2.7.2

The next example shows how to activate the same versions of the tools mentioned above by using CI/CD variables defined in your project’s .gitlab-ci.yml file.

include:
  - template: Security/License-Scanning.gitlab-ci.yml

license_scanning:
  variables:
    ASDF_NODEJS_VERSION: '12.16.3'
    ASDF_RUBY_VERSION: '2.7.2'

A full list of variables can be found in CI/CD variables.

To find out what tools are pre-installed in the license_scanning Docker image use the following command:

$ docker run --entrypoint='' registry.gitlab.com/gitlab-org/security-products/analyzers/license-finder:3 /bin/bash -lc 'asdf list'
golang
  1.14
gradle
  6.3
java
  adopt-openjdk-11.0.7+10
  adopt-openjdk-8u242-b08
maven
  3.6.3
nodejs
  10.20.1
  12.16.3
php
  7.4.5
python
  2.7.18
  3.8.2
ruby
  2.6.6
sbt
  1.3.8

To interact with the license_scanning runtime environment use the following command:

$ docker run -it --entrypoint='' registry.gitlab.com/gitlab-org/security-products/analyzers/license-finder:3 /bin/bash -l
root@6abb70e9f193:~#
noteSelecting a custom version of Mono or .NET Core is currently not supported.