- Scan result policy editor
- Scan result policies schema
- Scan result policy schema
scan_finding
rule typelicense_finding
rule typerequire_approval
action type- Example security scan result policies project
- Example for Scan Result Policy editor
- Example situations where scan result policies require additional approval
Scan result policies
Group-level scan result policies introduced in GitLab 15.6.
You can use scan result policies to take action based on scan results. For example, one type of scan result policy is a security approval policy that allows approval to be required based on the findings of one or more security scan jobs. Scan result policies are evaluated after a CI scanning job is fully executed.
The following video gives you an overview of GitLab scan result policies:
Scan result policy editor
- Introduced in GitLab 14.8.
- Enabled by default in GitLab 15.6.
Once your policy is complete, save it by selecting Configure with a merge request at the bottom of the editor. This redirects you to the merge request on the project’s configured security policy project. If a security policy project doesn’t link to your project, GitLab creates such a project for you. Existing policies can also be removed from the editor interface by selecting Delete policy at the bottom of the editor.
Most policy changes take effect as soon as the merge request is merged. Any changes that do not go through a merge request and are committed directly to the default branch may require up to 10 minutes before the policy changes take effect.
The policy editor supports YAML mode and rule mode.
Scan result policies schema
The YAML file with scan result policies consists of an array of objects matching the scan result
policy schema nested under the scan_result_policy
key. You can configure a maximum of five
policies under the scan_result_policy
key.
When you save a new policy, GitLab validates its contents against this JSON schema. If you’re not familiar with how to read JSON schemas, the following sections and tables provide an alternative.
Field | Type | Possible values | Description |
---|---|---|---|
scan_result_policy |
array of Scan Result Policy | List of scan result policies (maximum 5). |
Scan result policy schema
Field | Type | Possible values | Description |
---|---|---|---|
name | string | Name of the policy. Maximum of 255 characters. | |
description (optional) | string | Description of the policy. | |
enabled | boolean |
true , false
| Flag to enable (true ) or disable (false ) the policy. |
rules |
array of rules | List of rules that the policy applies. | |
actions |
array of actions | List of actions that the policy enforces. |
scan_finding
rule type
This rule enforces the defined actions based on security scan findings.
Field | Type | Possible values | Description |
---|---|---|---|
type | string | scan_finding | The rule’s type. |
branches |
array of string
|
[] or the branch’s name | Applicable only to protected target branches. An empty array, [] , applies the rule to all protected target branches. |
scanners |
array of string
|
sast , secret_detection , dependency_scanning , container_scanning , dast , coverage_fuzzing , api_fuzzing
| The security scanners for this rule to consider. sast includes results from both SAST and SAST IaC scanners. |
vulnerabilities_allowed | integer | Greater than or equal to zero | Number of vulnerabilities allowed before this rule is considered. |
severity_levels |
array of string
|
info , unknown , low , medium , high , critical
| The severity levels for this rule to consider. |
vulnerability_states |
array of string
|
newly_detected , detected , confirmed , resolved , dismissed , new_needs_triage , new_dismissed
| All vulnerabilities fall into two categories: Newly Detected Vulnerabilities - the newly_detected policy option covers vulnerabilities identified in the merge request branch itself but that do not currently exist on the default branch. This policy option requires a pipeline to complete before the rule is evaluated so that it knows whether vulnerabilities are newly detected or not. Merge requests are blocked until the pipeline and necessary security scans are complete. The newly_detected option considers both of the following statuses:• Detected • Dismissed The new_needs_triage option considers the status• Detected The new_dismissed option considers the status• Dismissed Pre-Existing Vulnerabilities - these policy options are evaluated immediately and do not require a pipeline complete as they consider only vulnerabilities previously detected in the default branch. • Detected - the policy looks for vulnerabilities in the detected state.• Confirmed - the policy looks for vulnerabilities in the confirmed state.• Dismissed - the policy looks for vulnerabilities in the dismissed state.• Resolved - the policy looks for vulnerabilities in the resolved state. |
license_finding
rule type
-
Introduced in GitLab 15.9 with a flag named
license_scanning_policies
. -
Generally available in GitLab 15.11. Feature flag
license_scanning_policies
removed.
This rule enforces the defined actions based on license findings.
Field | Type | Possible values | Description |
---|---|---|---|
type | string | license_finding | The rule’s type. |
branches |
array of string
|
[] or the branch’s name | Applicable only to protected target branches. An empty array, [] , applies the rule to all protected target branches. |
match_on_inclusion | boolean |
true , false
| Whether the rule matches inclusion or exclusion of licenses listed in license_types . |
license_types |
array of string
| license types | License types to match on, for example BSD or MIT . |
license_states |
array of string
|
newly_detected , detected
| Whether to match newly detected and/or previously detected licenses. The newly_detected state triggers approval when either a new package is introduced or when a new license for an existing package is detected. |
require_approval
action type
This action sets an approval rule to be required when conditions are met for at least one rule in the defined policy.
Field | Type | Possible values | Description |
---|---|---|---|
type | string | require_approval | The action’s type. |
approvals_required | integer | Greater than or equal to zero | The number of MR approvals required. |
user_approvers |
array of string
| Username of one of more users | The users to consider as approvers. Users must have access to the project to be eligible to approve. |
user_approvers_ids |
array of integer
| ID of one of more users | The IDs of users to consider as approvers. Users must have access to the project to be eligible to approve. |
group_approvers |
array of string
| Path of one of more groups | The groups to consider as approvers. Users with direct membership in the group are eligible to approve. |
group_approvers_ids |
array of integer
| ID of one of more groups | The IDs of groups to consider as approvers. Users with direct membership in the group are eligible to approve. |
role_approvers |
array of string
| One or more roles (for example: owner , maintainer ) | The roles to consider as approvers that are eligible to approve. |
Requirements and limitations:
- You must add the respective security scanning tools. Otherwise, scan result policies do not have any effect.
- The maximum number of policies is five.
- Each policy can have a maximum of five rules.
- All configured scanners must be present in the merge request’s latest pipeline. If not, approvals are required even if some vulnerability criteria have not been met.
Example security scan result policies project
You can use this example in a .gitlab/security-policies/policy.yml
file stored in a
security policy project:
---
scan_result_policy:
- name: critical vulnerability CS approvals
description: critical severity level only for container scanning
enabled: true
rules:
- type: scan_finding
branches:
- main
scanners:
- container_scanning
vulnerabilities_allowed: 0
severity_levels:
- critical
vulnerability_states:
- newly_detected
actions:
- type: require_approval
approvals_required: 1
user_approvers:
- adalberto.dare
- name: secondary CS approvals
description: secondary only for container scanning
enabled: true
rules:
- type: scan_finding
branches:
- main
scanners:
- container_scanning
vulnerabilities_allowed: 1
severity_levels:
- low
- unknown
vulnerability_states:
- newly_detected
actions:
- type: require_approval
approvals_required: 1
user_approvers:
- sam.white
role_approvers:
- owner
In this example:
- Every MR that contains new
critical
vulnerabilities identified by container scanning requires one approval fromalberto.dare
. - Every MR that contains more than one new
low
orunknown
vulnerability identified by container scanning requires one approval fromsam.white
.
Example for Scan Result Policy editor
You can use this example in the YAML mode of the Scan Result Policy editor. It corresponds to a single object from the previous example:
- name: critical vulnerability CS approvals
description: critical severity level only for container scanning
enabled: true
rules:
- type: scan_finding
branches:
- main
scanners:
- container_scanning
vulnerabilities_allowed: 1
severity_levels:
- critical
vulnerability_states:
- newly_detected
actions:
- type: require_approval
approvals_required: 1
user_approvers:
- adalberto.dare
Example situations where scan result policies require additional approval
There are several situations where the scan result policy requires an additional approval step. For example:
- The number of security jobs is reduced in the working branch and no longer matches the number of security jobs in the target branch. Users can’t skip the Scanning Result Policies by removing scanning jobs from the CI configuration.
- Someone stops a pipeline security job, and users can’t skip the security scan.
- A job in a merge request fails and is configured with
allow_failure: false
. As a result, the pipeline is in a blocked state. - A pipeline has a manual job that must run successfully for the entire pipeline to pass.