❗ Repo-supervisor is not being actively maintained
The Repo-supervisor is a tool that helps you to detect secrets and passwords in your code. It's as easy to install as adding a new webhook to your Github repository.
It works in two separate modes. The first one allows us to scan Github pull requests, and the second one works from the command line where it scans local directories.
To start using a tool, download the latest release from the Github releases page. There are two bundles available for both AWS Lambda deployment as well as for the CLI mode. Using CLI mode doesn't require any additional configuration, whereas to use the PR mode, it's necessary to deploy the bundle to AWS Lambda first.
The CLI mode allows scanning local directories with source code to detect secrets and passwords in files. That is the simplest deployment option, and it could become a part of the CI pipeline.
Findings might be either returned in the plaintext or JSON format:
$ npm ci && npm run build
$ node ./dist/cli.js ./test/fixtures/integration/dir.with.secrets
[./test/fixtures/integration/dir.with.secrets/foo/bar.js]
>> zJd-55qmsY6LD53CRTqnCr_g-
>> gm5yb-hJWRoS7ZJTi_YUj_tbU
>> GxC56B6x67anequGYNPsW_-TL
>> MLTk-BuGS8s6Tx9iK5zaL8a_W
>> 2g877BA_TsE-WoPoWrjHah9ta
[./test/fixtures/integration/dir.with.secrets/foo/foo.json]
>> d7kyociU24P9hJ_sYVkqzo-kE
>> q28Wt3nAmLt_3NGpqi2qz-jQ7
$ JSON_OUTPUT=1 node ./dist/cli.js ./test/fixtures/integration/dir.with.secrets
{"result":[{"filepath":"./test/fixtures/integration/dir.with.secrets/foo/bar.js","secrets":["zJd-55qmsY6LD53CRTqnCr_g-","gm5yb-hJWRoS7ZJTi_YUj_tbU","GxC56B6x67anequGYNPsW_-TL","MLTk-BuGS8s6Tx9iK5zaL8a_W","2g877BA_TsE-WoPoWrjHah9ta"]},{"filepath":"./test/fixtures/integration/dir.with.secrets/foo/foo.json","secrets":["d7kyociU24P9hJ_sYVkqzo-kE","q28Wt3nAmLt_3NGpqi2qz-jQ7"]}]}
Running a tool in the pull request mode requires to add a new webhook to the Github repository. Webhook should be triggered on a pull request events whenever someone opens, updates, or closes a PR. Therefore, when a scan is triggered, it will update the PR status to either success or failure, depending on findings.
Webhook configuration details:
Setting | Value |
---|---|
Payload URL | AWS Lambda URL |
Content type | application/json |
Events type | Pull requests |
Whenever a tool finds security issues, it sets the PR status to error, and it adds a link to view the report. Link to the report is a URL to AWS Lambda deployment with an additional query parameter ?id=<jwt>
that allows to generate the HTML report.
Check out a sample report:
Depending on the success or failure of the scan, it will set a proper PR status.
Error - issues detected
Success - no issues were found
A false positive was reported
Repo-supervisor aims to decrease the number of false positives as much as possible. It means that it doesn't scan all file types and extensions. Each file is parsed according to its format to extract strings, and this is a context-aware process that requires to use a language tokenizer. The currently supported file types are:
- JSON (.json)
- JavaScript (.js)
- YAML (.yaml)
We plan to add new file types in the future. Read a documentation on how to add a new file type to learn more.
This is the list of currently implemented checks in a tool:
Module | Details |
---|---|
Entropy Meter | Finds strings with a high entropy to detect secrets and passwords in supported file types. |
CLI mode:
- Scan a directory provided as argument
- Get a list of all files and return only those matching supported extensions like
*.json
or*.js
- Process every supported file with a tokenizer (different one for each file type)
- Iterate over all extracted strings and run security checks on them
- Entropy Meter - calculate the entropy value to see if it goes above defined threshold (maxAllowedEntropy)
- Print out detected issues either in a plain-text or JSON format
Pull Request mode:
- Receive a webhook payload
- Process payload and extract all modified files
- Iterate over each file:
- Use the appropriate tokenizer based on file type
- Extract strings from a file
- Run security checks on those strings
- If tool detects issues then it sets CI status to error with a link to the report
- If no issues were found then it sets CI status to success
Read more on the CI status definition.
Verify that the secrets you want to find are inside supported file types. Read more in the Supported files section.
To support a new file type, you need to create a new parser. Some of the file types might require to use external tokenizers because of the complex structure like JavaScript files. On the other hand, for simple file types, it's pretty straightforward as it was with JSON files.
Read more on how to add a new file type.
Auth0 helps you to:
- Add authentication with multiple authentication sources, either social like Google, Facebook, Microsoft Account, LinkedIn, GitHub, Twitter, Box, Salesforce, amont others, or enterprise identity systems like Windows Azure AD, Google Apps, Active Directory, ADFS or any SAML Identity Provider.
- Add authentication through more traditional username/password databases.
- Add support for linking different user accounts with the same user.
- Support for generating signed Json Web Tokens to call your APIs and flow the user identity securely.
- Analytics of how, when and where users are logging in.
- Pull data from other sources and add it to the user profile, through JavaScript rules.
- Go to Auth0 and click Sign Up.
- Use Google, GitHub or Microsoft Account to login.
If you have found a bug or if you have a feature request, please report them at this repository issues section. Please do not report security vulnerabilities on the public GitHub issue tracker. The Responsible Disclosure Program details the procedure for disclosing security issues.
This project is licensed under the MIT license. See the LICENSE file for more info.