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stage | group | info | type |
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Secure | Static Analysis | 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 | reference |
Secure and Defend terminology
This terminology list for GitLab Secure and Defend aims to:
- Promote a ubiquitous language for discussing application security.
- Improve the effectiveness of communication regarding GitLab's application security features.
- Get new contributors up to speed faster.
This document defines application security terms in the specific context of GitLab's Secure and Defend products. Terms may therefore have different meanings outside of GitLab Secure and Defend.
Terms
Analyzer
Software that performs a scan. The scan analyzes an attack surface for vulnerabilities and produces a report containing findings. Reports adhere to the Secure report format.
Analyzers integrate into GitLab using a CI job. The report produced by the analyzer is published as an artifact once the job is complete. GitLab ingests this report, allowing users to visualize and manage found vulnerabilities. For more information, see Security Scanner Integration.
Many GitLab analyzers follow a standard approach using Docker to run a wrapped scanner. For example,
the Docker image bandit-sast
is an analyzer that wraps the scanner Bandit
. You can optionally
use the Common library
to assist in building an Analyzer.
Attack surface
The different places in an application that are vulnerable to attack. Secure products discover and search the attack surface during scans. Each product defines the attack surface differently. For example, SAST uses files and line numbers, and DAST uses URLs.
CVE
Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures (CVE®) is a list of common identifiers for publicly known cybersecurity vulnerabilities. The list is managed by the Mitre Corporation.
CVSS
The Common Vulnerability Scoring System (CVSS) is a free and open industry standard for assessing the severity of computer system security vulnerabilities.
CWE
Common Weakness Enumeration (CWE™) is a community-developed list of common software and hardware weakness types that have security ramifications. Weaknesses are flaws, faults, bugs, vulnerabilities, or other errors in software or hardware implementation, code, design, or architecture. If left unaddressed, weaknesses could result in systems, networks, or hardware being vulnerable to attack. The CWE List and associated classification taxonomy serve as a language that you can use to identify and describe these weaknesses in terms of CWEs.
Duplicate finding
A legitimate finding that is reported multiple times. This can occur when different scanners discover the same finding, or when a single scan inadvertently reports the same finding more than once.
False positive
A finding that doesn't exist but is incorrectly reported as existing.
Feedback
Feedback the user provides about a finding. Types of feedback include dismissal, creating an issue, or creating a merge request.
Finding
An asset that has the potential to be vulnerable, identified within a project by an analyzer. Assets include but are not restricted to source code, binary packages, containers, dependencies, networks, applications, and infrastructure.
Insignificant finding
A legitimate finding that a particular customer doesn't care about.
Location fingerprint
A finding's location fingerprint is a text value that's unique for each location on the attack surface. Each Secure product defines this according to its type of attack surface. For example, SAST incorporates file path and line number.
Pipeline Security tab
A page that displays findings discovered in the associated CI pipeline.
Primary identifier
A finding's primary identifier is a value unique to that finding. The external type and external ID of the finding's first identifier combine to create the value.
Examples of primary identifiers include ZAP's PluginID
, or CVE
for Klar. Note that the
identifier must be stable. Subsequent scans must return the same value for the same finding, even if
the location has slightly changed.
Report finding
A finding that only exists in a report produced by an analyzer, and is yet to be persisted to the database. The report finding becomes a vulnerability finding once it's imported into the database.
Scan type (report type)
The type of scan. This must be one of the following:
container_scanning
dependency_scanning
dast
sast
Scanner
Software that can scan for vulnerabilities. The resulting scan report is typically not in the Secure report format. Examples include ESLint, Klar, and ZAP.
Secure product
A group of features related to a specific area of application security with first-class support by GitLab. Products include Container Scanning, Dependency Scanning, Dynamic Application Security Testing (DAST), Secret Detection, Static Application Security Testing (SAST), and Fuzz Testing. Each of these products typically include one or more analyzers.
Secure report format
A standard report format that Secure products comply with when creating JSON reports. The format is described by a JSON schema.
Security Dashboard
Provides an overview of all the vulnerabilities for a project, group, or GitLab instance. Vulnerabilities are only created from findings discovered on the project's default branch.
Vendor
The party maintaining an analyzer. As such, a vendor is responsible for integrating a scanner into GitLab and keeping it compatible as they evolve. A vendor isn't necessarily the author or maintainer of the scanner, as in the case of using an open core or OSS project as a base solution of an offering. For scanners included as part of a GitLab distribution or GitLab subscription, the vendor is listed as GitLab.
Vulnerability
A flaw that has a negative impact on the security of its environment. Vulnerabilities describe the error or weakness, and don't describe where the error is located (see finding). Each vulnerability maps to a unique finding.
Vulnerability finding
When a report finding is stored to the database, it becomes a vulnerability finding.
Vulnerability tracking
Deals with the responsibility of matching findings across scans so that a finding's life cycle can be understood. Engineers and security teams use this information to decide whether to merge code changes, and to see unresolved findings and when they were introduced. Vulnerabilities are tracked by comparing the location fingerprint, primary identifier, and report type.
Vulnerability occurrence
Deprecated, see finding.