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Socket Security CLI

The Socket Security CLI was created to enable integrations with other tools like Github Actions, Gitlab, BitBucket, local use cases and more. The tool will get the head scan for the provided repo from Socket, create a new one, and then report any new alerts detected. If there are new alerts against the Socket security policy it'll exit with a non-Zero exit code.

Usage

socketcli [-h] [--api-token API_TOKEN] [--repo REPO] [--integration {api,github,gitlab}] [--owner OWNER] [--branch BRANCH]
          [--committers [COMMITTERS ...]] [--pr-number PR_NUMBER] [--commit-message COMMIT_MESSAGE] [--commit-sha COMMIT_SHA]
          [--target-path TARGET_PATH] [--sbom-file SBOM_FILE] [--files FILES] [--default-branch] [--pending-head]
          [--generate-license] [--enable-debug] [--enable-json] [--enable-sarif] [--disable-overview] [--disable-security-issue]
          [--allow-unverified] [--ignore-commit-files] [--disable-blocking] [--scm SCM] [--timeout TIMEOUT]
          [--exclude-license-details]

If you don't want to provide the Socket API Token every time then you can use the environment variable SOCKET_SECURITY_API_KEY

Parameters

Authentication

Parameter Required Default Description
--api-token False Socket Security API token (can also be set via SOCKET_SECURITY_API_KEY env var)

Repository

Parameter Required Default Description
--repo False Repository name in owner/repo format
--integration False api Integration type (api, github, gitlab)
--owner False Name of the integration owner, defaults to the socket organization slug
--branch False "" Branch name
--committers False Committer(s) to filter by

Pull Request and Commit

Parameter Required Default Description
--pr-number False "0" Pull request number
--commit-message False Commit message
--commit-sha False "" Commit SHA

Path and File

Parameter Required Default Description
--target-path False ./ Target path for analysis
--sbom-file False SBOM file path
--files False [] Files to analyze (JSON array string)

Branch and Scan Configuration

Parameter Required Default Description
--default-branch False False Make this branch the default branch
--pending-head False False If true, the new scan will be set as the branch's head scan

Output Configuration

Parameter Required Default Description
--generate-license False False Generate license information
--enable-debug False False Enable debug logging
--enable-json False False Output in JSON format
--enable-sarif False False Enable SARIF output of results instead of table or JSON format
--disable-overview False False Disable overview output
--exclude-license-details False False Exclude license details from the diff report (boosts performance for large repos)

Security Configuration

Parameter Required Default Description
--allow-unverified False False Allow unverified packages
--disable-security-issue False False Disable security issue checks

Advanced Configuration

Parameter Required Default Description
--ignore-commit-files False False Ignore commit files
--disable-blocking False False Disable blocking mode
--scm False api Source control management type
--timeout False Timeout in seconds for API requests

File Selection Behavior

The CLI determines which files to scan based on the following logic:

  1. Git Commit Files: By default, the CLI checks files changed in the current git commit first. If any of these files match supported manifest patterns (like package.json, requirements.txt, etc.), a scan is triggered.

  2. --files Parameter: If no git commit exists, or no manifest files are found in the commit changes, the CLI checks files specified via the --files parameter. This parameter accepts a JSON array of file paths.

  3. --ignore-commit-files: When this flag is set, git commit files are ignored completely, and only files specified in --files are considered. This also forces a scan regardless of whether manifest files are present.

  4. No Manifest Files: If no manifest files are found in either git commit changes or --files (and --ignore-commit-files is not set), the scan is skipped.

Note: The CLI does not scan only the specified files - it uses them to determine whether a scan should be performed. When a scan is triggered, it searches the entire --target-path for all supported manifest files.

Examples

  • Commit with manifest file: If your commit includes changes to package.json, a scan will be triggered automatically.
  • Commit without manifest files: If your commit only changes non-manifest files (like .github/workflows/socket.yaml), no scan will be performed unless you use --files or --ignore-commit-files.
  • Using --files: If you specify --files '["package.json"]', the CLI will check if this file exists and is a manifest file before triggering a scan.
  • Using --ignore-commit-files: This forces a scan of all manifest files in the target path, regardless of what's in your commit.

Development

This project uses pyproject.toml as the primary dependency specification.

Development Workflows

The following Make targets provide streamlined workflows for common development tasks:

Initial Setup (Choose One)

  1. Standard Setup (using PyPI packages):
pyenv local 3.11  # Ensure correct Python version
make first-time-setup
  1. Local Development Setup (for SDK development):
pyenv local 3.11  # Ensure correct Python version
SOCKET_SDK_PATH=~/path/to/socket-sdk-python make first-time-local-setup

The default SDK path is ../socket-sdk-python if not specified.

Ongoing Development Tasks

After changing dependencies in pyproject.toml:

make update-deps

After pulling changes:

make sync-all

Available Make targets:

High-level workflows:

  • make first-time-setup: Complete setup using PyPI packages
  • make first-time-local-setup: Complete setup for local SDK development
  • make update-deps: Update requirements.txt files and sync dependencies
  • make sync-all: Sync dependencies after pulling changes
  • make dev-setup: Setup for local development (included in first-time-local-setup)

Implementation targets:

  • make init-tools: Creates virtual environment and installs pip-tools
  • make local-dev: Installs dependencies needed for local development
  • make compile-deps: Generates requirements.txt files with locked versions
  • make setup: Creates virtual environment and installs dependencies
  • make sync-deps: Installs exact versions from requirements.txt
  • make clean: Removes virtual environment and cache files
  • make test: Runs pytest suite
  • make lint: Runs ruff for code formatting and linting

Environment Variables

  • SOCKET_SDK_PATH: Path to local socket-sdk-python repository (default: ../socket-sdk-python)

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Socket Python CLI to use in integrations

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