132 lines
6 KiB
Markdown
132 lines
6 KiB
Markdown
---
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stage: Plan
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group: Project Management
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info: To determine the technical writer assigned to the Stage/Group associated with this page, see https://about.gitlab.com/handbook/engineering/ux/technical-writing/#assignments
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---
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# Confidential issues
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> [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-foss/-/merge_requests/3282) in GitLab 8.6.
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Confidential issues are issues visible only to members of a project with
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[sufficient permissions](#permissions-and-access-to-confidential-issues).
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Confidential issues can be used by open source projects and companies alike to
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keep security vulnerabilities private or prevent surprises from leaking out.
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## Making an issue confidential
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You can make an issue confidential during issue creation or by editing
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an existing one.
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When you create a new issue, a checkbox right below the text area is available
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to mark the issue as confidential. Check that box and hit the **Submit issue**
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button to create the issue. For existing issues, edit them, check the
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confidential checkbox and hit **Save changes**.
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![Creating a new confidential issue](img/confidential_issues_create.png)
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## Modifying issue confidentiality
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There are two ways to change an issue's confidentiality.
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The first way is to edit the issue and mark/unmark the confidential checkbox.
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Once you save the issue, it will change the confidentiality of the issue.
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The second way is to locate the Confidentiality section in the sidebar and click
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**Edit**. A popup should appear and give you the option to turn on or turn off confidentiality.
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| Turn off confidentiality | Turn on confidentiality |
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| :-----------: | :----------: |
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| ![Turn off confidentiality](img/turn_off_confidentiality.png) | ![Turn on confidentiality](img/turn_on_confidentiality.png) |
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Every change from regular to confidential and vice versa, is indicated by a
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system note in the issue's comments.
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![Confidential issues system notes](img/confidential_issues_system_notes.png)
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## Indications of a confidential issue
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NOTE:
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If you don't have [enough permissions](#permissions-and-access-to-confidential-issues),
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you won't be able to see the confidential issues at all.
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There are a few things that visually separate a confidential issue from a
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regular one. In the issues index page view, you can see the eye-slash icon
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next to the issues that are marked as confidential.
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![Confidential issues index page](img/confidential_issues_index_page.png)
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---
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Likewise, while inside the issue, you can see the eye-slash icon right next to
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the issue number, but there is also an indicator in the comment area that the
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issue you are commenting on is confidential.
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![Confidential issue page](img/confidential_issues_issue_page.png)
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There is also an indicator on the sidebar denoting confidentiality.
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| Confidential issue | Not confidential issue |
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| :-----------: | :----------: |
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| ![Sidebar confidential issue](img/sidebar_confidential_issue.png) | ![Sidebar not confidential issue](img/sidebar_not_confidential_issue.png) |
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## Permissions and access to confidential issues
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There are two kinds of level access for confidential issues. The general rule
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is that confidential issues are visible only to members of a project with at
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least [Reporter access](../../permissions.md#project-members-permissions). However, a guest user can also create
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confidential issues, but can only view the ones that they created themselves.
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Confidential issues are also hidden in search results for unprivileged users.
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For example, here's what a user with Maintainer and Guest access sees in the
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project's search results respectively.
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| Maintainer access | Guest access |
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| :-----------: | :----------: |
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| ![Confidential issues search master](img/confidential_issues_search_master.png) | ![Confidential issues search guest](img/confidential_issues_search_guest.png) |
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## Merge Requests for Confidential Issues
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> [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-foss/-/issues/58583) in GitLab 12.1.
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To help prevent confidential information being leaked from a public project
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in the process of resolving a confidential issue, confidential issues can be
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resolved by creating a merge request from a private fork.
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The merge request created will target the default branch of the private fork,
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not the default branch of the public upstream project. This prevents the merge
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request, branch, and commits entering the public repository, and revealing
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confidential information prematurely. When the confidential commits are ready
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to be made public, this can be done by opening a merge request from the private
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fork to the public upstream project.
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NOTE:
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If you create a long-lived private fork in the same group or in a sub-group of
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the original upstream, all the users with Developer membership to the public
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project will also have the same permissions in the private project. This way,
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all the Developers, who have access to view confidential issues, will have a
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streamlined workflow for fixing them.
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### How it works
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On a confidential issue, a **Create confidential merge request** button is
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available. Clicking on it will open a dropdown where you can choose to
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**Create confidential merge request and branch** or **Create branch**:
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| Create confidential merge request | Create branch |
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| :-------------------------------: | :-----------: |
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| ![Create Confidential Merge Request Dropdown](img/confidential_mr_dropdown_v12_1.png) | ![Create Confidential Branch Dropdown](img/confidential_mr_branch_dropdown_v12_1.png) |
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The **Project** dropdown includes the list of private forks the user is a member
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of as at least a Developer and merge requests are enabled.
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Whenever the **Branch name** and **Source (branch or tag)** fields change, the
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availability of the target or source branch will be checked. Both branches should
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be available in the private fork selected.
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By clicking the **Create confidential merge request** button, GitLab will create
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the branch and merge request in the private fork. When you choose
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**Create branch**, GitLab will only create the branch.
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Once the branch is created in the private fork, developers can now push code to
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that branch to fix the confidential issue.
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