Dependency Scanning Analyzers (ULTIMATE)
Dependency Scanning relies on underlying third-party tools that are wrapped into what we call "Analyzers". An analyzer is a dedicated project that wraps a particular tool to:
- Expose its detection logic.
- Handle its execution.
- Convert its output to the common format.
This is achieved by implementing the common API.
Dependency Scanning supports the following official analyzers:
The analyzers are published as Docker images, which Dependency Scanning uses to launch dedicated containers for each analysis.
The Dependency Scanning analyzers' current major version number is 2.
Dependency Scanning is pre-configured with a set of default images that are maintained by GitLab, but users can also integrate their own custom images.
WARNING:
The bundler-audit
analyzer is deprecated and will be removed in GitLab 15.0 since it duplicates the functionality of the gemnasium
analyzer. For more information, read the deprecation announcement.
WARNING:
The retire.js
analyzer is deprecated and will be removed in GitLab 15.0 since it duplicates the functionality of the gemnasium
analyzer. For more information, read the deprecation announcement.
Official default analyzers
Any custom change to the official analyzers can be achieved by using a
CI/CD variable in your .gitlab-ci.yml
.
Using a custom Docker mirror
You can switch to a custom Docker registry that provides the official analyzer
images under a different prefix. For instance, the following instructs Dependency
Scanning to pull my-docker-registry/gl-images/gemnasium
instead of registry.gitlab.com/security-products/gemnasium
.
In .gitlab-ci.yml
define:
include:
template: Security/Dependency-Scanning.gitlab-ci.yml
variables:
SECURE_ANALYZERS_PREFIX: my-docker-registry/gl-images
This configuration requires that your custom registry provides images for all the official analyzers.
Disable specific analyzers
You can select the official analyzers you don't want to run. Here's how to disable
bundler-audit
and gemnasium
analyzers.
In .gitlab-ci.yml
define:
include:
template: Security/Dependency-Scanning.gitlab-ci.yml
variables:
DS_EXCLUDED_ANALYZERS: "bundler-audit, gemnasium"
Disabling default analyzers
Setting DS_EXCLUDED_ANALYZERS
to a list of the official analyzers disables them.
In .gitlab-ci.yml
define:
include:
template: Security/Dependency-Scanning.gitlab-ci.yml
variables:
DS_EXCLUDED_ANALYZERS: "gemnasium, gemnasium-maven, gemnasium-python, bundler-audit, retire.js"
This is used when one totally relies on custom analyzers.
Custom analyzers
You can provide your own analyzers by
defining CI jobs in your CI configuration. For consistency, you should suffix your custom Dependency
Scanning jobs with -dependency_scanning
. Here's how to add a scanning job that's based on the
Docker image my-docker-registry/analyzers/nuget
and generates a Dependency Scanning report
gl-dependency-scanning-report.json
when /analyzer run
is executed. Define the following in
.gitlab-ci.yml
:
nuget-dependency_scanning:
image:
name: "my-docker-registry/analyzers/nuget"
script:
- /analyzer run
artifacts:
reports:
dependency_scanning: gl-dependency-scanning-report.json
The Security Scanner Integration documentation explains how to integrate custom security scanners into GitLab.
Analyzers data
The following table lists the data available for each official analyzer.
Property \ Tool | Gemnasium | bundler-audit | Retire.js |
---|---|---|---|
Severity | 𐄂 | ✓ | ✓ |
Title | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
File | ✓ | ✓ | |
Start line | 𐄂 | 𐄂 | 𐄂 |
End line | 𐄂 | 𐄂 | 𐄂 |
External ID (for example, CVE) | ✓ | ✓ | |
URLs | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
Internal doc/explanation | ✓ | 𐄂 | 𐄂 |
Solution | ✓ | ✓ | 𐄂 |
Confidence | 𐄂 | 𐄂 | 𐄂 |
Affected item (for example, class or package) | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
Source code extract | 𐄂 | 𐄂 | 𐄂 |
Internal ID | ✓ | 𐄂 | 𐄂 |
Date | ✓ | 𐄂 | 𐄂 |
Credits | ✓ | 𐄂 | 𐄂 |
- ✓ => we have that data
-
⚠ => we have that data, but it's partially reliable, or we need to extract that data from unstructured content - 𐄂 => we don't have that data, or it would need to develop specific or inefficient/unreliable logic to obtain it.
The values provided by these tools are heterogeneous, so they are sometimes
normalized into common values (for example, severity
, confidence
, etc).