in-toto
grype
in-toto | grype | |
---|---|---|
4 | 56 | |
827 | 7,649 | |
0.8% | 1.9% | |
8.9 | 9.5 | |
9 days ago | 5 days ago | |
Python | Go | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | Apache License 2.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
in-toto
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UEFI Software Bill of Materials Proposal
The things you mentioned are not solved by a typical "SBOM" but e.g. CycloneDX has extra fields to record provenance and pedigree and things like in-toto (https://in-toto.io/) or SLSA (https://slsa.dev/) also aim to work in this field.
I've spent the last six months in this field and people will tell you that this or that is an industry best practice or "a standard" but in my experience none of that is true. Everyone is still trying to figure out how best to protect the software supply chain security and things are still very much in flux.
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An Overview of Kubernetes Security Projects at KubeCon Europe 2023
in-toto is an open source project that focuses on the attestation part of software supply chain security. You use it to define a “layout” for a project, i.e., how the different components should fit together. A project ships this definition with its code, and then another user of that software can compare what they have with the attached definition to see if it matches the structure and contents they expect. If it doesn’t, then this could point to external tampering or other issues.
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How do you mitigate supply chain attacks?
But it's not all doom and gloom because the industry is evolving. Companies like Google are formulating tools like scorecard to heuristically reduce risk by encouraging you to rely on trustable dependencies only. There's also more complex tools like in-toto that actually look at the integrity of your supply chain (don't ask me how this one works, I just know that people like it).
- in-toto/in-toto: in-toto is a framework to protect supply chain integrity.
grype
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Introduction to the Kubernetes ecosystem
Trivy Operator : A simple and comprehensive vulnerability scanner for containers and other artifacts. It detects vulnerabilities of OS packages (Alpine, Debian, CentOS, etc.) and application dependencies (pip, npm, yarn, composer, etc.) (Alternatives : Grype, Snyk, Clair, Anchore, Twistlock)
- Suas imagens de container não estão seguras!
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I looked through attacks in my access logs. Here's what I found
Besides pointing pentester tools like metasploit at yourself, there are some nice scanners out there.
https://github.com/quay/clair
https://github.com/anchore/grype/
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Distroless images using melange and apko
Using Grype:
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Scanning and remediating vulnerabilities with Grype
In the lab to follow, we'll see how vulnerability scanning can be conveniently achieved with Grype and how various systematic techniques can be applied to start securing our microservices at the container image level.
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Understanding Container Security
Scanning your container images for vulnerabilities is a good approach. But this scanning is not one time job, it should be done regularly (weekly, monthly, etc.) You need to follow vulnerability reports and fix all of the vulnerabilities as soon as possible. I recommend some open-source tools that could be useful: Trivy, Docker-Bench, Grype.
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An Overview of Kubernetes Security Projects at KubeCon Europe 2023
Grype is another popular open source tool from Anchore. Working with SBOM files, Grype scans container images and filesystems for vulnerabilities. Grype supports different output formats for vulnerabilities and custom templates for output.
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Best vulnerability scanner for DevOps
Grype (https://github.com/anchore/grype)
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Security docker app
Grype will allow you to scan a container to see if you have any vulnerable packages.
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Open source container scanning tool to find vulnerabilities and suggest best practice improvements?
https://github.com/anchore/grype 5.6k stars, updated 3 days ago
What are some alternatives?
snyk - Snyk CLI scans and monitors your projects for security vulnerabilities. [Moved to: https://github.com/snyk/cli]
trivy - Find vulnerabilities, misconfigurations, secrets, SBOM in containers, Kubernetes, code repositories, clouds and more
scorecard - OpenSSF Scorecard - Security health metrics for Open Source
anchore-engine - A service that analyzes docker images and scans for vulnerabilities
ochrona-cli - A command line tool for detecting vulnerabilities in Python dependencies and doing safe package installs
clair - Vulnerability Static Analysis for Containers
pip-audit - Audits Python environments, requirements files and dependency trees for known security vulnerabilities, and can automatically fix them
syft - CLI tool and library for generating a Software Bill of Materials from container images and filesystems
macOS-Security-and-Privacy-Guide - Guide to securing and improving privacy on macOS
opencve - CVE Alerting Platform
i-probably-didnt-backdoor-this - A practical experiment on supply-chain security using reproducible builds
falco - Cloud Native Runtime Security