64 lines
3.2 KiB
Markdown
64 lines
3.2 KiB
Markdown
---
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type: reference, howto
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stage: Secure
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group: Threat Insights
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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/#designated-technical-writers
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---
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# Vulnerability Pages
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> [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/13561) in [GitLab Ultimate](https://about.gitlab.com/pricing/) 13.0.
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Each security vulnerability in a project's [Security Dashboard](../security_dashboard/index.md#project-security-dashboard) has an individual page which includes:
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- Details of the vulnerability.
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- The status of the vulnerability within the project.
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- Available actions for the vulnerability.
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- Issues related to the vulnerability.
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On the vulnerability page, you can interact with the vulnerability in
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several different ways:
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- [Change the Vulnerability Status](#changing-vulnerability-status) - You can change the
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status of a vulnerability to **Detected**, **Confirmed**, **Dismissed**, or **Resolved**.
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- [Create issue](#creating-an-issue-for-a-vulnerability) - Create a new issue with the
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title and description pre-populated with information from the vulnerability report.
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By default, such issues are [confidential](../../project/issues/confidential_issues.md).
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- [Link issues](#link-issues-to-the-vulnerability) - Link existing issues to vulnerability.
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- [Solution](#automatic-remediation-for-vulnerabilities) - For some vulnerabilities,
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a solution is provided for how to fix the vulnerability.
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## Changing vulnerability status
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You can switch the status of a vulnerability using the **Status** dropdown to one of
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the following values:
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| Status | Description |
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|-----------|-------------------------------------------------------------------|
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| Detected | The default state for a newly discovered vulnerability |
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| Confirmed | A user has seen this vulnerability and confirmed it to be real |
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| Dismissed | A user has seen this vulnerability and dismissed it |
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| Resolved | The vulnerability has been fixed and is no longer in the codebase |
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A timeline shows you when the vulnerability status has changed,
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and allows you to comment on a change.
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## Creating an issue for a vulnerability
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You can create an issue for a vulnerability by selecting the **Create issue** button.
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This creates a [confidential issue](../../project/issues/confidential_issues.md) in the
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project the vulnerability came from, and pre-populates it with useful information from
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the vulnerability report. After the issue is created, GitLab redirects you to the
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issue page so you can edit, assign, or comment on the issue.
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## Link issues to the vulnerability
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You can link one or more existing issues to the vulnerability. This allows you to
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indicate that this vulnerability affects multiple issues. It also allows you to indicate
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that the resolution of one issue would resolve multiple vulnerabilities.
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## Automatic remediation for vulnerabilities
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You can fix some vulnerabilities by applying the solution that GitLab automatically
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generates for you. [Read more about the automatic remediation for vulnerabilities feature](../index.md#solutions-for-vulnerabilities-auto-remediation).
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