Commit 5ebc4d92 authored by GitLab Bot's avatar GitLab Bot

Add latest changes from gitlab-org/gitlab@master

parent 52cacdb8
......@@ -6,7 +6,7 @@ import {
GlModal,
GlModalDirective,
} from '@gitlab/ui';
import _ from 'underscore';
import { escape as esc } from 'lodash';
import ClipboardButton from '~/vue_shared/components/clipboard_button.vue';
import ToggleButton from '~/vue_shared/components/toggle_button.vue';
import axios from '~/lib/utils/axios_utils';
......@@ -65,7 +65,7 @@ export default {
'AlertService|%{linkStart}Learn more%{linkEnd} about configuring this endpoint to receive alerts.',
),
{
linkStart: `<a href="${_.escape(
linkStart: `<a href="${esc(
this.learnMoreUrl,
)}" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">`,
linkEnd: '</a>',
......
import _ from 'underscore';
import { escape as esc } from 'lodash';
import '~/gl_dropdown';
export default class CreateItemDropdown {
......@@ -37,14 +37,14 @@ export default class CreateItemDropdown {
},
selectable: true,
toggleLabel(selected) {
return selected && 'id' in selected ? _.escape(selected.title) : this.defaultToggleLabel;
return selected && 'id' in selected ? esc(selected.title) : this.defaultToggleLabel;
},
fieldName: this.fieldName,
text(item) {
return _.escape(item.text);
return esc(item.text);
},
id(item) {
return _.escape(item.id);
return esc(item.id);
},
onFilter: this.toggleCreateNewButton.bind(this),
clicked: options => {
......
......@@ -4,6 +4,8 @@
}
.dashboard-card {
@include gl-cursor-grab;
&-header {
&-warning {
background-color: $orange-100;
......
---
title: Add grab cursor for operations dashboard cards
merge_request: 28868
author:
type: changed
......@@ -904,7 +904,7 @@ The new pipeline can be:
- A detached merge request pipeline.
- A [pipeline for merged results](../ci/merge_request_pipelines/pipelines_for_merged_results/index.md)
if the [project setting is enabled](../ci/merge_request_pipelines/pipelines_for_merged_results/index.md#enabling-pipelines-for-merged-results).
if the [project setting is enabled](../ci/merge_request_pipelines/pipelines_for_merged_results/index.md#enable-pipelines-for-merged-results).
```plaintext
POST /projects/:id/merge_requests/:merge_request_iid/pipelines
......
......@@ -7,9 +7,8 @@ last_update: 2019-07-03
> [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-foss/issues/15310) in GitLab 11.6.
In a [basic configuration](../pipelines/pipeline_architectures.md), GitLab runs a pipeline each time
changes are pushed to a branch. The settings in the [`.gitlab-ci.yml`](../yaml/README.md)
file, including `rules`, `only`, and `except`, determine which jobs are added to a pipeline.
In a [basic configuration](../pipelines/pipeline_architectures.md#basic-pipelines), GitLab runs a pipeline each time
changes are pushed to a branch.
If you want the pipeline to run jobs **only** when merge requests are created or updated,
you can use *pipelines for merge requests*.
......@@ -28,7 +27,7 @@ A few notes:
## Configuring pipelines for merge requests
To configure pipelines for merge requests, configure your CI yaml file.
To configure pipelines for merge requests, configure your [CI/CD configuration file](../yaml/README.md).
There are a few different ways to do this.
### Enable pipelines for merge requests for all jobs
......
......@@ -36,31 +36,41 @@ again run against the merged results.
## Requirements and limitations
Pipelines for merged results require a [GitLab Runner][runner] 11.9 or newer.
[runner]: https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-runner
In addition, pipelines for merged results have the following limitations:
Pipelines for merged results have the following requirements and limitations:
- Pipelines for merged results require [GitLab Runner](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-runner) 11.9 or newer.
- Forking/cross-repo workflows are not currently supported. To follow progress,
see [#11934](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/issues/11934).
- This feature is not available for
[fast forward merges](../../../user/project/merge_requests/fast_forward_merge.md) yet.
To follow progress, see [#58226](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/26996).
## Enabling Pipelines for Merged Results
## Enable pipelines for merged results
To enable pipelines on merged results at the project level:
To enable pipelines for merged results for your project:
1. [Configure your CI/CD configuration file](../index.md#configuring-pipelines-for-merge-requests)
so that the pipeline or individual jobs run for merge requests.
1. Visit your project's **Settings > General** and expand **Merge requests**.
1. Check **Merge pipelines will try to validate the post-merge result prior to merging**.
1. Click **Save changes** button.
1. Click **Save changes**.
CAUTION: **Caution:**
If you select the check box but don't configure your CI/CD to use
pipelines for merge requests, your merge requests may become stuck in an
unresolved state or your pipelines may be dropped.
## Using Merge Trains
![Merge request pipeline config](img/merge_request_pipeline_config.png)
When you enable [Pipelines for merged results](#pipelines-for-merged-results-premium),
GitLab [automatically displays](merge_trains/index.md#add-a-merge-request-to-a-merge-train)
a **Start/Add Merge Train button**.
CAUTION: **Warning:**
Make sure your `gitlab-ci.yml` file is [configured properly for pipelines for merge requests](../index.md#configuring-pipelines-for-merge-requests),
otherwise pipelines for merged results won't run and your merge requests will be stuck in an unresolved state.
Generally, this is a safer option than merging merge requests immediately, because your
merge request will be evaluated with an expected post-merge result before the actual
merge happens.
For more information, read the [documentation on Merge Trains](merge_trains/index.md).
## Automatic pipeline cancelation
......@@ -118,15 +128,3 @@ which indicates that the checkout-SHA is not found in the merge ref.
This behavior was improved at GitLab 12.4 by introducing [Persistent pipeline refs](../../pipelines/index.md#troubleshooting-fatal-reference-is-not-a-tree).
You should be able to create pipelines at any timings without concerning the error.
## Using Merge Trains **(PREMIUM)**
By enabling [Pipelines for merged results](#pipelines-for-merged-results-premium),
GitLab will [automatically display](merge_trains/index.md#how-to-add-a-merge-request-to-a-merge-train)
a **Start/Add Merge Train button** as the most recommended merge strategy.
Generally, this is a safer option than merging merge requests immediately as your
merge request will be evaluated with an expected post-merge result before the actual
merge happens.
For more information, read the [documentation on Merge Trains](merge_trains/index.md).
......@@ -19,21 +19,18 @@ Merging now could introduce breaking changes.
*Merge trains* can prevent this from happening. A merge train is a queued list of merge
requests, each waiting to be merged into the target branch.
Each merge request on the train runs the merged results pipeline immediately before its
changes are merged into the target branch. If the pipeline fails, the breaking changes are
not merged, and the target branch is unaffected.
Many merge requests can be added to the train. Each merge request runs its own merged results pipeline,
which includes the changes from all of the other merge requests in *front* of it on the train.
All the pipelines run in parallel, to save time.
Many merge requests can be added to the train. Each is trying to merge into the target branch.
Each request runs its own merged results pipeline, which includes the changes from
all of the other merge requests in *front* of it on the train. All the pipelines run
in parallel, to save time.
If the pipeline for a merge request fails, the breaking changes are not merged, and the target
branch is unaffected. The merge request is removed from the train, and all pipelines behind it restart.
If the pipeline for the merge request at the front of the train completes successfully,
the changes are merged into the target branch, and the other pipelines will continue to
the changes are merged into the target branch, and the other pipelines continue to
run.
If one of the pipelines fails, it is removed from the train, and all pipelines behind
it restart, but without the changes that were removed.
## Merge train example
Three merge requests (`A`, `B` and `C`) are added to a merge train in order, which
creates three merged results pipelines that run in parallel:
......@@ -50,85 +47,99 @@ to run. If more merge requests are added to the train, they will now include the
changes that are included in the target branch, and the `C` changes that are from
the merge request already in the train.
Learn more about
Read more about
[how merge trains keep your master green](https://about.gitlab.com/blog/2020/01/30/all-aboard-merge-trains/).
<i class="fa fa-youtube-play youtube" aria-hidden="true"></i>
Watch this video for a demonstration on [how parallel execution
of Merge Trains can prevent commits from breaking the default
branch](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D4qCqXgZkHQ).
## Requirements and limitations
Merge trains have the following requirements and limitations:
- Merge trains require [GitLab Runner](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-runner) 11.9 or newer.
- GitLab 12.0 and later requires [Redis](https://redis.io/) 3.2 or higher.
- [Pipelines for merged results](../index.md#pipelines-for-merged-results-premium) must be
**configured properly**.
- Each merge train can run a maximum of **twenty** pipelines in parallel.
If more than twenty merge requests are added to the merge train, the merge requests
will be queued until a slot in the merge train is free. There is no limit to the
number of merge requests that can be queued.
<i class="fa fa-youtube-play youtube" aria-hidden="true"></i>
Watch this video for a demonstration on [how parallel execution
of Merge Trains can prevent commits from breaking the default
branch](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D4qCqXgZkHQ).
## Enable merge trains
## How to add a merge request to a merge train
To enable merge trains for your project:
To add a merge request to a merge train:
1. If you are on a self-managed GitLab instance, ensure the [feature flag](#merge-trains-feature-flag-premium-only) is set correctly.
1. [Configure your CI/CD configuration file](../../index.md#configuring-pipelines-for-merge-requests)
so that the pipeline or individual jobs run for merge requests.
1. Visit your project's **Settings > General** and expand **Merge requests**.
1. Check **Merge pipelines will try to validate the post-merge result prior to merging**.
1. Click **Save changes**.
CAUTION: **Caution:**
If you select the check box but don't configure your CI/CD to use
pipelines for merge requests, your merge requests may become stuck in an
unresolved state or your pipelines may be dropped.
## Start a merge train
To start a merge train:
1. Visit a merge request.
1. Click the **Start/Add to merge train** button.
1. Click the **Start merge train** button.
![Start merge train](img/merge_train_start_v12_0.png)
## How to remove a merge request from a merge train
Other merge requests can now be added to the train.
## Add a merge request to a merge train
To add a merge request to a merge train:
1. Visit a merge request.
1. Click the **Remove from merge train** button.
1. Click the **Add to merge train** button.
![Cancel merge train](img/merge_train_cancel_v12_0.png)
If pipelines are already running for the merge request, you cannot add the merge request
to the train. Instead, you can schedule to add the merge request to a merge train **when the latest
pipeline succeeds**.
## How to view a merge request's current position on the merge train
![Add to merge train when pipeline succeeds](img/merge_train_start_when_pipeline_succeeds_v12_0.png)
After a merge request has been added to the merge train, the merge request's
current position will be displayed under the pipeline widget:
## Remove a merge request from a merge train
![Merge train position indicator](img/merge_train_position_v12_0.png)
1. Visit a merge request.
1. Click the **Remove from merge train** button.
## Start/Add to merge train when pipeline succeeds
![Cancel merge train](img/merge_train_cancel_v12_0.png)
You can add a merge request to a merge train only when the latest pipeline in the
merge request is finished. While the pipeline is running or pending, you cannot add
the merge request to a train because the current change of the merge request may
be broken thus it could affect the following merge requests.
If you want to add the merge request to a merge train again later, you can.
In this case, you can schedule to add the merge request to a merge train **when the latest
pipeline succeeds** (This pipeline is [Pipelines for merged results](../index.md), not Pipelines for merge train).
You can see the following button instead of the regular **Start/Add to merge train**
button while the latest pipeline is running.
## View a merge request's current position on the merge train
![Add to merge train when pipeline succeeds](img/merge_train_start_when_pipeline_succeeds_v12_0.png)
After a merge request has been added to the merge train, the merge request's
current position is displayed under the pipeline widget:
![Merge train position indicator](img/merge_train_position_v12_0.png)
## Immediately merge a merge request with a merge train
In the case where you have a high-priority merge request (for example, a critical patch) to be merged urgently,
you can use **Merge Immediately** option for bypassing the merge train.
If you have a high-priority merge request (for example, a critical patch) that must
be merged urgently, you can bypass the merge train by using the **Merge Immediately** option.
This is the fastest option to get the change merged into the target branch.
![Merge Immediately](img/merge_train_immediate_merge_v12_6.png)
However, every time you merge a merge request immediately, it could affect the
existing merge train to be reconstructed, specifically, it regenerates expected
merge commits and pipelines. This means, merging immediately essentially wastes
CI resources. Because of these downsides, you will be asked to confirm before
the merge is initiated:
![Merge immediately confirmation dialog](img/merge_train_immediate_merge_confirmation_dialog_v12_6.png)
CAUTION: **Caution:**
Each time you merge a merge request immediately, the current merge train
is recreated and all pipelines restart.
## Troubleshooting
### Merge request dropped from the merge train immediately
If a merge request is not mergeable (for example, it's WIP, there is a merge
conflict, etc), your merge request will be dropped from the merge train automatically.
conflict, etc.), your merge request will be dropped from the merge train automatically.
In these cases, the reason for dropping the merge request is in the **system notes**.
......@@ -146,35 +157,30 @@ To check the reason:
### Merge When Pipeline Succeeds cannot be chosen
[Merge When Pipeline Succeeds](../../../../user/project/merge_requests/merge_when_pipeline_succeeds.md)
is unavailable when
[Pipelines for Merged Results is enabled](../index.md#enabling-pipelines-for-merged-results).
is currently unavailable when Merge Trains are enabled.
Follow [this issue](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/issues/12267) to
track progress on this issue.
See [the related issue](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/issues/12267)
for more information.
### Merge Train Pipeline cannot be retried
A Merge Train pipeline cannot be retried because the merge request is dropped from the merge train upon failure. For this reason, the retry button does not appear next to the pipeline icon.
In the case of pipeline failure, you should [re-enqueue](#how-to-add-a-merge-request-to-a-merge-train) the merge request to the merge train, which will then initiate a new pipeline.
### Merge Train disturbs your workflow
In the case of pipeline failure, you should [re-enqueue](#add-a-merge-request-to-a-merge-train) the merge request to the merge train, which will then initiate a new pipeline.
First of all, please check if [merge immediately](#immediately-merge-a-merge-request-with-a-merge-train)
is available as a workaround in your workflow. This is the most recommended
workaround you'd be able to take immediately. If it's not available or acceptable,
please read through this section.
### Merge Trains feature flag **(PREMIUM ONLY)**
Merge train is enabled by default when you enable [Pipelines for merged results](../index.md),
however, you can disable this feature by setting the `:disable_merge_trains` feature flag to `enable`.
When you disable this feature, all existing merge trains are aborted and
the **Start/Add Merge Train** button no longer appears in merge requests.
To enable and disable the Merge Trains feature, use the `:disable_merge_trains` feature flag.
To check if the feature flag is enabled on your GitLab instance,
please ask an administrator to execute the following commands **(CORE ONLY)**:
ask an administrator to execute the following commands:
```shell
> sudo gitlab-rails console # Login to Rails console of GitLab instance.
> Feature.enabled?(:disable_merge_trains) # Check if it's disabled or not.
> Feature.enable(:disable_merge_trains) # Disable Merge Trains.
> Feature.disable(:disable_merge_trains) # Enable Merge Trains.
```
When you disable this feature, all existing merge trains are cancelled and
the **Start/Add to Merge Train** button no longer appears in merge requests.
......@@ -34,7 +34,7 @@ description: 'Learn how to contribute to GitLab.'
- [Code review guidelines](code_review.md) for reviewing code and having code reviewed
- [Database review guidelines](database_review.md) for reviewing database-related changes and complex SQL queries, and having them reviewed
- [Secure coding guidelines](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-com/gl-security/security-guidelines)
- [Secure coding guidelines](secure_coding_guidelines.md)
- [Pipelines for the GitLab project](pipelines.md)
Complementary reads:
......
......@@ -211,6 +211,15 @@ To ensure that we get consistent ordering, we will append an ordering on the pri
key, in descending order. This is usually `id`, so basically we will add `order(id: :desc)`
to the end of the relation. A primary key _must_ be available on the underlying table.
#### Shortcut fields
Sometimes it can seem easy to implement a "shortcut field", having the resolver return the first of a collection if no parameters are passed.
These "shortcut fields" are discouraged because they create maintenance overhead.
They need to be kept in sync with their canonical field, and deprecated or modified if their canonical field changes.
Use the functionality the framework provides unless there is a compelling reason to do otherwise.
For example, instead of `latest_pipeline`, use `pipelines(last: 1)`.
### Exposing permissions for a type
To expose permissions the current user has on a resource, you can call
......
# Security Guidelines
This document contains descriptions and guidelines for addressing security
vulnerabilities commonly identified in the GitLab codebase. They are intended
to help developers identify potential security vulnerabilities early, with the
goal of reducing the number of vulnerabilities released over time.
**Contributing**
If you would like to contribute to one of the existing documents, or add
guidelines for a new vulnerability type, please open an MR! Please try to
include links to examples of the vulnerability found, and link to any resources
used in defined mitigations. If you have questions or when ready for a review,
please ping `gitlab-com/gl-security/appsec`.
## Permissions
### Description
Application permissions are used to determine who can access what and what actions they can perform.
For more information about the permission model at GitLab, please see [the GitLab permissions guide](permissions.md) or the [EE docs on permissions](../../ee/user/permissions.md).
### Impact
Improper permission handling can have significant impacts on the security of an application.
Some situations may reveal [sensitive data](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-com/gl-infra/production/issues/477) or allow a malicious actor to perform [harmful actions](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/issues/8180).
The overall impact depends heavily on what resources can be accessed or modified improperly.
A common vulnerability when permission checks are missing is called [IDOR](https://www.owasp.org/index.php/Testing_for_Insecure_Direct_Object_References_(OTG-AUTHZ-004)) for Insecure Direct Object References.
### When to Consider
Each time you implement a new feature/endpoint, whether it is at UI, API or GraphQL level.
### Mitigations
**Start by writing tests** around permissions: unit and feature specs should both include tests based around permissions
- Fine-grained, nitty-gritty specs for permissions are good: it is ok to be verbose here
- Make assertions based on the actors and objects involved: can a user or group or XYZ perform this action on this object?
- Consider defining them upfront with stakeholders, particularly for the edge cases
- Do not forget **abuse cases**: write specs that **make sure certain things can't happen**
- A lot of specs are making sure things do happen and coverage percentage doesn't take into account permissions as same piece of code is used.
- Make assertions that certain actors cannot perform actions
- Naming convention to ease auditability: to be defined, e.g. a subfolder containing those specific permission tests or a `#permissions` block
Be careful to **also test [visibility levels](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-foss/-/blob/master/doc/development/permissions.md#feature-specific-permissions)** and not only project access rights.
Some example of well implemented access controls and tests:
1. [example1](https://dev.gitlab.org/gitlab/gitlab-ee/merge_requests/710/diffs?diff_id=13750#af40ef0eaae3c1e018809e1d88086e32bccaca40_43_43)
1. [example2](https://dev.gitlab.org/gitlab/gitlabhq/merge_requests/2511/diffs#ed3aaab1510f43b032ce345909a887e5b167e196_142_155)
1. [example3](https://dev.gitlab.org/gitlab/gitlabhq/merge_requests/3170/diffs?diff_id=17494)
**NB:** any input from development team is welcome, e.g. about rubocop rules.
## Regular Expressions guidelines
### Anchors / Multi line
Unlike other programming languages (e.g. Perl or Python) Regular Expressions are matching multi-line by default in Ruby. Consider the following example in Python:
```python
import re
text = "foo\nbar"
matches = re.findall("^bar$",text)
print(matches)
```
The Python example will output an emtpy array (`[]`) as the matcher considers the whole string `foo\nbar` including the newline (`\n`). In contrast Ruby's Regular Expression engine acts differently:
```ruby
text = "foo\nbar"
p text.match /^bar$/
```
The output of this example is `#<MatchData "bar">`, as Ruby treats the input `text` line by line. In order to match the whole __string__ the Regex anchors `\A` and `\z` should be used according to [Rubular](https://rubular.com/).
#### Impact
This Ruby Regex speciality can have security impact, as often regular expressions are used for validations or to impose restrictions on user-input.
#### Examples
GitLab specific examples can be found [here](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/issues/36029#note_251262187) and [there](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/issues/33569).
Another example would be this fictional Ruby On Rails controller:
```ruby
class PingController < ApplicationController
def ping
if params[:ip] =~ /^\d{1,3}\.\d{1,3}\.\d{1,3}\.\d{1,3}$/
render :text => `ping -c 4 #{params[:ip]}`
else
render :text => "Invalid IP"
end
end
end
```
Here `params[:ip]` should not contain anything else but numbers and dots. However this restriction can be easily bypassed as the Regex anchors `^` and `$` are being used. Ultimately this leads to a shell command injection in `ping -c 4 #{params[:ip]}` by using newlines in `params[:ip]`.
#### Mitigation
In most cases the anchors `\A` for beginning of text and `\z` for end of text should be used instead of `^` and `$`.
### Further Links
- [Rubular](https://rubular.com/) is a nice online tool to fiddle with Ruby Regexps.
## Server Side Request Forgery (SSRF)
### Description
A [Server-side Request Forgery (SSRF)][1] is an attack in which an attacker
is able coerce a application into making an outbound request to an unintended
resource. This resource is usually internal. In GitLab, the connection most
commonly uses HTTP, but an SSRF can be performed with any protocol, such as
Redis or SSH.
With an SSRF attack, the UI may or may not show the response. The latter is
called a Blind SSRF. While the impact is reduced, it can still be useful for
attackers, especially for mapping internal network services as part of recon.
[1]: https://www.hackerone.com/blog-How-To-Server-Side-Request-Forgery-SSRF
### Impact
The impact of an SSRF can vary, depending on what the application server
can communicate with, how much the attacker can control of the payload, and
if the response is returned back to the attacker. Examples of impact that
have been reported to GitLab include:
- Network mapping of internal services
- This can help an attacker gather information about internal services
that could be used in further attacks. [More details](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-foss/issues/51327).
- Reading internal services, including cloud service metadata.
- The latter can be a serious problem, because an attacker can obtain keys that allow control of the victim's cloud infrastructure. (This is also a good reason
to give only necessary privileges to the token.). [More details](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-foss/issues/51490).
- When combined with CRLF vulnerability, remote code execution. [More details](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-foss/issues/41293)
### When to Consider
- When the application makes any outbound connection
### Mitigations
In order to mitigate SSRF vulnerabilities, it is necessary to validate the destination of the outgoing request, especially if it includes user-supplied information.
The preferred SSRF mitigations within GitLab are:
1. Only connect to known, trusted domains/IP addresses.
1. Use the [GitLab::HTTP](#gitlab-http-library) library
1. Implement [feature-specific mitigations](#feature-specific-mitigations)
#### GitLab HTTP Library
The [GitLab::HTTP][2] wrapper library has grown to include mitigations for all of the GitLab-known SSRF vectors. It is also configured to respect the
`Outbound requests` options that allow instance administrators to block all internal connections, or limit the networks to which connections can be made.
In some cases, it has been possible to configure GitLab::HTTP as the HTTP
connection library for 3rd-party gems. This is preferrable over re-implementing
the mitigations for a new feature.
- [More details](https://dev.gitlab.org/gitlab/gitlabhq/merge_requests/2530/diffs)
[2]: https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/blob/master/lib/gitlab/http.rb
#### Feature-specific Mitigations
For situtions in which a whitelist or GitLab:HTTP cannot be used, it will be necessary to implement mitigations directly in the feature. It is best to validate the destination IP addresses themselves, not just domain names, as DNS can be controlled by the attacker. Below are a list of mitigations that should be implemented.
**Important Note:** There are many tricks to bypass common SSRF validations. If feature-specific mitigations are necessary, they should be reviewed by the AppSec team, or a developer who has worked on SSRF mitigations previously.
- Block connections to all localhost addresses
- `127.0.0.1/8` (IPv4 - note the subnet mask)
- `::1` (IPv6)
- Block connections to networks with private addressing (RFC 1918)
- `10.0.0.0/8`
- `172.16.0.0/12`
- `192.168.0.0/24`
- Block connections to link-local addresses (RFC 3927)
- `169.254.0.0/16`
- In particular, for GCP: `metadata.google.internal` -> `169.254.169.254`
- For HTTP connections: Disable redirects or validate the redirect destination
- To mitigate DNS rebinding attacks, validate and use the first IP address received
See [url_blocker_spec.rb][3] for examples of SSRF payloads
[3]: https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/blob/master/spec/lib/gitlab/url_blocker_spec.rb
## XSS guidelines
### Description
Cross site scripting (XSS) is an issue where malicious JavaScript code gets injected into a trusted web application and executed in a client's browser. The input is intended to be data, but instead gets treated as code by the browser.
XSS issues are commonly classified in three categories, by their delivery method:
- [Persistent XSS](https://owasp.org/www-community/Types_of_Cross-Site_Scripting#stored-xss-aka-persistent-or-type-i)
- [Reflected XSS](https://owasp.org/www-community/Types_of_Cross-Site_Scripting#reflected-xss-aka-non-persistent-or-type-ii)
- [DOM XSS](https://owasp.org/www-community/Types_of_Cross-Site_Scripting#dom-based-xss-aka-type-0)
### Impact
The injected client-side code is executed on the victim's browser in the context of their current session. This means the attacker could perform any same action the victim would normally be able to do through a browser. The attacker would also have the ability to:
- [log victim keystrokes](https://youtu.be/2VFavqfDS6w?t=1367)
- launch a network scan from the victim's browser
- potentially [obtain the victim's session tokens](https://youtu.be/2VFavqfDS6w?t=739)
- perform actions that lead to data loss/theft or account takeover
Much of the impact is contingent upon the function of the application and the capabilities of the victim's session. For further impact possibilities, please check out [the beef project](https://beefproject.com/).
### When to consider?
When user submitted data is included in responses to end users, which is just about anywhere.
### Mitigation
In most situations, a two-step solution can be utilized: input validation and output encoding in the appropriate context.
#### Input validation
- [Input Validation](https://youtu.be/2VFavqfDS6w?t=7489)
##### Setting expectations
For any and all input fields, ensure to define expectations on the type/format of input, the contents, [size limits](https://youtu.be/2VFavqfDS6w?t=7582), the context in which it will be output. It's important to work with both security and product teams to determine what is considered acceptable input.
##### Validate input
- Treat all user input as untrusted.
- Based on the expectations you [defined above](#setting-expectations):
- Validate the [input size limits](https://youtu.be/2VFavqfDS6w?t=7582).
- Validate the input using a [whitelist approach](https://youtu.be/2VFavqfDS6w?t=7816) to only allow characters through which you are expecting to receive for the field.
- Input which fails validation should be **rejected**, and not sanitized.
Note that blacklists should be avoided, as it is near impossible to block all [variations of XSS](https://www.owasp.org/index.php/XSS_Filter_Evasion_Cheat_Sheet).
#### Output encoding
Once you've [determined when and where](#setting-expectations) the user submitted data will be output, it's important to encode it based on the appropriate context. For example:
- Content placed inside HTML elements need to be [HTML entity encoded](https://cheatsheetseries.owasp.org/cheatsheets/Cross_Site_Scripting_Prevention_Cheat_Sheet.html#rule-1---html-escape-before-inserting-untrusted-data-into-html-element-content).
- Content placed into a JSON response needs to be [JSON encoded](https://cheatsheetseries.owasp.org/cheatsheets/Cross_Site_Scripting_Prevention_Cheat_Sheet.html#rule-31---html-escape-json-values-in-an-html-context-and-read-the-data-with-jsonparse).
- Content placed inside [HTML URL GET parameters](https://youtu.be/2VFavqfDS6w?t=3494) need to be [URL-encoded](https://cheatsheetseries.owasp.org/cheatsheets/Cross_Site_Scripting_Prevention_Cheat_Sheet.html#rule-5---url-escape-before-inserting-untrusted-data-into-html-url-parameter-values)
- [Additional contexts may require context-specific encoding](https://youtu.be/2VFavqfDS6w?t=2341).
### Additional info
#### Mitigating XSS in Rails
- [XSS Defense in Rails](https://youtu.be/2VFavqfDS6w?t=2442)
- [XSS Defense with HAML](https://youtu.be/2VFavqfDS6w?t=2796)
- [Validating Untrusted URLs in Ruby](https://youtu.be/2VFavqfDS6w?t=3936)
- [RoR Model Validators](https://youtu.be/2VFavqfDS6w?t=7636)
#### GitLab specific libraries for mitigating XSS
##### Vue
- [isSafeURL](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/blob/v12.7.5-ee/app/assets/javascripts/lib/utils/url_utility.js#L190-207)
#### Content Security Policy
- [Content Security Policy](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2VFavqfDS6w&t=12991s)
- [Use nonce-based Content Security Policy for inline JavaScript](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-foss/issues/65330)
#### Free form input fields
##### Sanitization
- [HTML Sanitization](https://youtu.be/2VFavqfDS6w?t=5075)
- [DOMPurify](https://youtu.be/2VFavqfDS6w?t=5381)
##### `iframe` sandboxes
- [iframe sandboxing](https://youtu.be/2VFavqfDS6w?t=7043)
### Select examples of past XSS issues affecting GitLab
- [Stored XSS in user status](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-foss/issues/55320)
### Developer Training
- [Introduction to XSS](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PXR8PTojHmc&t=7785s)
- [Reflected XSS](https://youtu.be/2VFavqfDS6w?t=603s)
- [Persistent XSS](https://youtu.be/2VFavqfDS6w?t=643)
- [DOM XSS](https://youtu.be/2VFavqfDS6w?t=5871)
- [XSS in depth](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2VFavqfDS6w&t=111s)
- [XSS Defense](https://youtu.be/2VFavqfDS6w?t=1685)
- [XSS Defense in Rails](https://youtu.be/2VFavqfDS6w?t=2442)
- [XSS Defense with HAML](https://youtu.be/2VFavqfDS6w?t=2796)
- [JavaScript URLs](https://youtu.be/2VFavqfDS6w?t=3274)
- [URL encoding context](https://youtu.be/2VFavqfDS6w?t=3494)
- [Validating Untrusted URLs in Ruby](https://youtu.be/2VFavqfDS6w?t=3936)
- [HTML Sanitization](https://youtu.be/2VFavqfDS6w?t=5075)
- [DOMPurify](https://youtu.be/2VFavqfDS6w?t=5381)
- [Safe Client-side JSON Handling](https://youtu.be/2VFavqfDS6w?t=6334)
- [iframe sandboxing](https://youtu.be/2VFavqfDS6w?t=7043)
- [Input Validation](https://youtu.be/2VFavqfDS6w?t=7489)
- [Validate size limits](https://youtu.be/2VFavqfDS6w?t=7582)
- [RoR model validators](https://youtu.be/2VFavqfDS6w?t=7636)
- [Whitelist input validation](https://youtu.be/2VFavqfDS6w?t=7816)
- [Content Security Policy](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2VFavqfDS6w&t=12991s)
# Testing with feature flags
To run a specific test with a feature flag enabled you can use the `QA::Runtime::Feature` class to enabled and disable feature flags ([via the API](../../../api/features.md)).
To run a specific test with a feature flag enabled you can use the `QA::Runtime::Feature` class to enable and disable feature flags ([via the API](../../../api/features.md)).
Note that administrator authorization is required to change feature flags. `QA::Runtime::Feature` will automatically authenticate as an administrator as long as you provide an appropriate access token via `GITLAB_QA_ADMIN_ACCESS_TOKEN` (recommended), or provide `GITLAB_ADMIN_USERNAME` and `GITLAB_ADMIN_PASSWORD`.
Please be sure to include the tag `:requires_admin` so that the test can be skipped in environments where admin access is not available.
```ruby
context "with feature flag enabled" do
context "with feature flag enabled", :requires_admin do
before do
Runtime::Feature.enable('feature_flag_name')
end
......
......@@ -533,6 +533,11 @@ The metrics include:
- **Response Metrics:** latency, throughput, error rate
- **System Metrics:** CPU utilization, memory utilization
GitLab provides some initial alerts for you after you install Prometheus:
- Ingress status code `500` > 0.1%
- NGINX status code `500` > 0.1%
To make use of Auto Monitoring:
1. [Install and configure the requirements](index.md#requirements).
......
......@@ -7,7 +7,7 @@ type: index
GitLab University is a great place to start when learning about version control with Git and GitLab, as well as other GitLab features.
If you're looking for a GitLab subscription for _your university_, see our [Education](https://about.gitlab.com/solutions/education/) page.
If you're looking for a GitLab subscription for _your university_, see our [GitLab for Education](https://about.gitlab.com/solutions/education/) page.
CAUTION: **Caution:**
Some of the content in GitLab University may be out of date and we plan to
......
......@@ -17184,6 +17184,12 @@ msgstr ""
msgid "Requirements"
msgstr ""
msgid "Requirements allow you to create criteria to check your products against."
msgstr ""
msgid "Requirements can be based on users, stakeholders, system, software or anything else you find important to capture."
msgstr ""
msgid "Requires approval from %{names}."
msgid_plural "Requires %{count} more approvals from %{names}."
msgstr[0] ""
......
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