Skip to main content

Your first STO pipeline

This tutorial shows you how to use the Harness Security Testing Orchestration (STO) module to perform code security scanning in a Harness pipeline. You'll set up a pipeline with one scanner, run scans, analyze the results, and learn about the key features of STO.

Prerequisites

In addition to a Harness account, this tutorial requires the following:

Objectives

You'll learn how to:

  1. Run the pipeline and analyze the security issues found by the scanner.
  2. Select a baseline for your test targets and use the baseline to identify "shift-left" issues in a downstream branch only vs. "shift-right" issues also found in the baseline branch.
  3. View issue details in the Harness UI and use these details to pinpoint and resolve issues in your code.
  4. Set up a scan step to fail automatically if it detects an issue with the specified severity or higher.
  5. Request an exemption ("ignore rule") for a specific issue.
  6. Approve the exemption. Once approved, the exemption won't fail the pipeline even if it equals or exceeds the severity threshold.
Review: what's supported in Harness STO

Go to What's supported in Harness STO for information about all supported STO features, infrastructures, and third-party scanners.

Developer workflow

You're a developer, working in various development branches and merging your code updates. You want to make sure you don't introduce any new vulnerabilities when you merge your code into the upstream branch. Using STO, you can scan your repo automatically and then use the results to pinpoint and fix your vulnerabilties before you merge.

Set up your codebase

This tutorial uses Bandit to scan the target repository https://github.com/williamwissemann/dvpwa (specified in the Codebase for this pipeline).

  1. Fork the following example repository into your GitHub account. This is a Python repo with known vulnerabilities: https://github.com/williamwissemann/dvpwa.

  2. If you don't have a Harness connector to your GitHub account, do the following:

    1. In your Harness project, select Project Setup > Connectors.
    2. Select New Connector, then select Code Repositories > GitHub.
    3. Set the GitHub connector settings as appropriate.
      • Use Account for the URL type.
      • This tutorial uses Harness Cloud, so select Connect through Harness Platform when prompted for the connectivity mode.

Set up your pipeline

Do the following:

  1. Select Security Testing Orchestration (left menu, top) > Pipelines > Create a Pipeline. Enter a name and click Start.

  2. In the new pipeline, select Add stage > Security.

  3. Set up your stage as follows:

    1. Enter a Stage Name.

    2. In Select Git Provider, select your GitHub connector.

    3. In Repository Name, click the value type selector (tack button) and select Runtime Input. You'll specify the repo to scan when you run the pipeline.

      Go to account user settings
  4. Go to Infrastructure and select Cloud, Linux, and AMD64 for the infrastructure, OS, and architecture.

    You can also use a Kubernetes or Docker build infrastructure, but these require additional work to set up. For more information, go to Set up a build infrastructure for STO.

Add a Bandit scan step

Key concept: scan targets and variants

Every STO scan has a specific target name and variant.

  • The name specifies the repository, image, or instance to scan.
  • The variant specifies the codebase branch, image tag, app version, or other variant.
  1. In the Pipeline Studio, go to Execution and add a Bandit step to your pipeline.

  2. Configure the step as follows:

    1. Scan Mode = Orchestration

      Indicates that this is an orchestrated scan that runs the scan and ingests the results in one step.

    2. Target name — Click the value-type selector (tack button to the right of the input field) and select Runtime input. You'll specify this and other values when you run the pipeline.

    3. Variant — Select Runtime input as the value type.

      Every STO scan has a target variant that specifies the branch, tag, or other variant to scan.

Scan the repo and analyze the results

Now that you've set up the pipeline, you can run a scan and view the detected issues.

  1. Select Save, and then select Run.

  2. In Run Pipeline, configure the run as follows:

    1. Under Codebase:
      • Repository name : dvpwa
      • Branch name : master
    2. Under Stage:
      • Target name : dvpwa (= the repo name)
      • Target variant : master (= the branch name)
    tip
    • Input sets make it easy to re-run a pipeline with a specific set of runtime inputs. To save your runtime settings to an input set, select Save as New Input on the bottom right.
  3. Run the pipeline. When the execution finishes, select Security Tests.

This tab shows the issues that the scanner found in the test target, categorized by severity. You can filter issues using the severity buttons, expand/collapse the issue lists, and click on an issue to view details.

In this case the scanner found found two issues, one critical and one medium, in the master branch.

Set the baseline

Key concept: baselines

A target baseline identifies the "prod" variant of the target, such as the main branch or the latest tag. Defining a baseline makes it easy to distinguish between “shift-right” issues in production targets and “shift-left” issues in downstream variants.

Note the following:

  • Harness strongly recommends that you specify a baseline for every target.

  • You can specify target baselines using regular expressions as well as fixed strings. Regular expressions are useful when the "prod" variant updates with each new release.

As a developer, you want to ensure that you don't introduce any new issues when you merge into your upstream branch. To do this, you create a baseline for your test target and compare your scans against the baseline.

  1. Select Security Test Orchestration > Test Targets.
  2. Go to the target in the table and select **branch : **master**.
Set the target baseline

Compare baseline vs. downstream issues

Suppose you're developing a new feature. You're working in a DEMO-001 branch that's downstream from the master branch. As a developer, you want to fix any "shift-left" issues in your downstream branch before you merge into the baseline.

First, you want to see if your branch has any security issues that aren't in the master branch.

  • Run the pipeline again with DEMO-001 as the target variant.
  • When the pipeline finishes, go to the Security Tests tab.

DEMO-001 has 5 security issues: 2 critical, 2 medium, 1 low. Note that 3 of these issues are in the DEMO-001 branch only and 2 are common to both DEMO-001 and master.

Fix vulnerabilities

Details

Key Concept: Issues and occurrences
When Harness processes the security issues identified in a scan, it deduplicates the results. Deduplication is the aggregation of multiple occurrences with the same root cause into one issue.

Note the following as you troubleshoot and fix your security issues:

  • Each security issue you see in the Security Tests page is unique and requires its own resolution.
  • A single issue might have multiple occurrences throughout the target. To remediate an issue, you must fix all occurrences of that issue.

The Issue Details pane has useful information for troubleshooting your security vulnerabilities.

  1. Expand one of the issue lists (for the baseline or the downstream branch) and select an issue. The Issue Details pane opens.

  • The severity score 9.5 is based on the NIST Common Vulnerability Scoring System (CVSS) version 3.0:
    • None 0.0
    • Low 0.1 - 3.9
    • Medium 4.0 - 6.9
    • High 7.0 - 8.9
    • Critical 9.0 - 10.0
  • The Occurrences List shows all occurrences of this specific issue in the test target.
  1. Select the Reference Identifier link (for example, CWE-78).

    Issue Details includes specific information about each vulnerability. In this case, you can view detailed information about the issue in the Common Weakness Enumeration database, a community-developed list of software and hardware weakness types.

  2. Examine the Occurrences list for this issue. (You might need to scroll down in the pane.) Here you can find additional details about each individual occurrence of the issue. Note that, to eliminate this vulnerability from the repo, you need to fix multiple occurrences:

Key Concept: Issue details are derived from the external scanner

Many of the details you see for each issue are derived from the external scanner. These details can differ, depending on the scan tool you're using. In this tutorial we're using Bandit, which is a free, open-source scan tool. In general, paid scanners provide more extensive details (such as remediation steps) than free ones.

Here's an example of a container image vulnerability detected by a paid version of Snyk:

New feature: AI-enhanced remediation

Harness AIDA™ uses state-of-the-art AI technology to streamline the process of triaging and fixing security vulnerabilities. Harness AIDA is based on large, well-trained language models. It learns continuously based on feedback and the latest public knowledge. Optionally, you can regenerate advice with additional context and thereby optimize your results.

For more information, go to Fix issues using AI-enhanced remediation steps.

Fail pipelines on severity

Key concept: fail_on_severity

Every STO scan step has a fail_on_severity setting. If any vulnerability with the specified severity or higher is found, the pipeline fails.

It is good practice to set fail_on_severity in every scan step in an integrated pipeline.

  1. In the Pipeline Studio, open the Bandit step.

  2. Set Fail on Severity to Critical.

  3. Select Apply Changes, save the updated pipeline, and run the pipeline again with the DEMO-001 branch.

The pipeline now fails because the Bandit step is now configured to fail on any critical vulnerability. The last log message in the Bandit step log is:

Exited with message: fail_on_severity is set to critical and that threshold was reached.

Developer/Secops workflow: exemptions for specific issues

Key concept: Exemptions, requests, and approvals

You can exempt known issues from fail_on_severity so that they don't stop the pipeline even when a scan detects them. The following steps outline the workflow:

  1. A developer requests an exemption for a specific issue and forwards the request to a SecOps user.

  2. The SecOps user approves the request or rejects it. Developer users can request exemptions, but only SecOps users can approve them.

  3. If the exemption is approved, and a future scan detects the exempted issue, the pipeline execution will not fail even if the issue meets the fail_on_severity threshold.

In this section, you'll create an exemption as a developer and then approve it as a SecOps user. (In many real-world scenarios, two separate people will be performing the workflow.)

  1. Make sure that you have the SecOps role assigned to yourself:

    1. Select the account link (left-most breadcrumb at the top). Then go to Account Settings (left menu) and select Access Control.
    Go to account user settings
    1. In the Users table, select your user profile.
    2. Under Role Bindings, select +Manage Role.
    3. Make sure that you have the Security Testing SecOps role assigned to yourself.
    Return to project
  2. Go back to your project: Select your STO account in the left menu, then select Project, and then select the project with your STO pipeline.

Return to project
  1. In the left navigation, select Executions and then select the last successful build you ran before the failed build.

In the following step, you'll create an exemption for each of the two critical issues found: subprocess_popen_with_shell_equals_true (only in the current scan) and hashlib (common to the baseline scan).

  1. In the Security Tests tab, do the following steps for each critical issue:

    1. Select the critical issue in the issues table (bottom left) to open Issue Details.
    2. Select Request Exemption.
    Request exemption
    1. In Request Exemption for Issue, configure the exemption request as follows:

    2. Where do you want this issue to be exempted? This pipeline

    3. For how long? 7 Days

    4. Reason this issue should be exempted: Other

    5. Further describe the reason this issue should be exempted: Tutorial example pipeline, not for use in QA or Prod environments

    6. Select Create Request.

      Request exemption details
  2. Select Exemptions in the left menu.

  3. In the Security Review page, select the "thumbs-up" buttons to approve both exemptions. These exemptions now move from Pending to Approved.

    Approve exemption requests
  4. Go back to your pipeline and run another build with the DEMO-001 branch. When the build finishes, go to the Security Tests page.

  5. Select Exempted (far right, under Security Executions). Note that this button, like the Critical, High, and other buttons, acts as a toggle to show and hide specific issues in the issues table. If you select and unselect Exempted, the exempted issues switch between visible and hidden.

    Exempted button in Security Tests tab
  6. Select Exemptions in the left menu. Then select Approved to show the exemptions you created and approved.

  7. Select the Delete (X) buttons on the right to delete both exemptions.

    Cancel exemption requests

Congratulations!

In this tutorial, you've learned how to:

  1. Set up a scanner
  2. Create a baseline
  3. Analyze scan results
  4. Use the data collected by STO to pinpoint and fix vulnerabilities before you merge your code updates.
  5. Configure fail_on_severity to fail a pipeline execution if a scan detects a vulnerability with the specified severity or higher.
  6. Request a exemption for a specific vulnerability (if you're a developer) and approve an exemption (if you're a SecOps person).

Next steps

You've now learned the core STO features and workflows. Here are the next steps you can take.

Add steps or stages for CI/CD workflows

You know how to implement pipelines when scanners detect security issues, and how to create Ignore Rules for specific issues. Once you set up your Security Test steps, baselines, and exemptions, you can add more stages and steps to implement your CI/CD workflows.

For some examples of integrated workflows, go to:

Add more scanner steps

STO supports an extensive set of external scanners for repos, images, and artifacts. Go to What's supported.

Add governance policies

You can use the Harness Policy Engine to create policies based on the Open Policy Agent (OPA) standard. For example, you can create a rule like the following to ensure that all pipelines include a Security stage.

package pipeline_required

# Deny pipelines that are missing required steps
deny[sprintf("CI stage '%s' is missing required step '%s'", [stage.name, existing_steps])] {
stage = input.pipeline.stages[i].stage # Find all stages ...
stage.type == "CI" # ... that are CI stages
existing_steps := [ s | s = stage.spec.execution.steps[_].step.type ] # ... and create a list of all step types in use
required_step := required_steps[_] # For each required step ...
not contains(existing_steps, required_step) # ... check if it's present in the existing steps
}

# steps that must be present in every CI stage - try to create a CI stage without a Security Test step to see the policy fail
required_steps = ["Security"]

contains(arr, elem) {
arr[_] = elem
}

Add failure strategies to a CI/CD stage

You can implement Failure Strategies to bypass the failure policies in previous security steps. One use case for this would be to enable manual interventions when a Security Test step generates a failure. You can set up a workflow like this:

  1. A Build step is downstream from the Security Test step. It has a failure strategy that's set to run on All Errors.
  2. The scanner detects issues and the Security Test step generates an error.
  3. The Failure Strategy in the Build step initiates a 30-minute pause before proceeding.
  4. The developer and security team evaluate the issues and then abort the pipeline execution or allow it to proceed.

YAML pipeline example

Here's an example of the pipeline you created in this tutorial. If you copy this example, replace the placeholder values with appropriate values for your project, organization, and connectors.

pipeline:
name: your-first-pipeline-v2
identifier: yourfirstpipelinev2
projectIdentifier: YOUR_HARNESS_PROJECT_ID
orgIdentifier: YOUR_HARNESS_ORGANIZATION_ID
tags: {}
stages:
- stage:
name: bandit_repo_scan
identifier: bandit_repo_scan
description: ""
type: SecurityTests
spec:
cloneCodebase: true
platform:
os: Linux
arch: Amd64
runtime:
type: Cloud
spec: {}
execution:
steps:
- step:
type: Bandit
name: bandit_repo_scan
identifier: bandit_repo_scan
spec:
mode: orchestration
config: default
target:
name: <+input>
type: repository
variant: <+input>
advanced:
log:
level: info
fail_on_severity: critical
properties:
ci:
codebase:
connectorRef: YOUR_CODEBASE_CONNECTOR_ID
repoName: <+input>
build: <+input>