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gosec/README.md

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# gosec - Golang Security Checker
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Inspects source code for security problems by scanning the Go AST.
<img src="https://securego.io/img/gosec.png" width="320">
## License
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Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License").
You may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
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You may obtain a copy of the License [here](http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0).
## Project status
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[![CII Best Practices](https://bestpractices.coreinfrastructure.org/projects/3218/badge)](https://bestpractices.coreinfrastructure.org/projects/3218)
[![Build Status](https://github.com/securego/gosec/workflows/CI/badge.svg)](https://github.com/securego/gosec/actions?query=workflows%3ACI)
[![Coverage Status](https://codecov.io/gh/securego/gosec/branch/master/graph/badge.svg)](https://codecov.io/gh/securego/gosec)
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[![GoReport](https://goreportcard.com/badge/github.com/securego/gosec)](https://goreportcard.com/badge/github.com/securego/gosec)
[![GoDoc](https://godoc.org/github.com/securego/gosec?status.svg)](https://godoc.org/github.com/securego/gosec)
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[![Docs](https://readthedocs.org/projects/docs/badge/?version=latest)](https://securego.io/)
[![Downloads](https://img.shields.io/github/downloads/securego/gosec/total.svg)](https://github.com/securego/gosec/releases)
[![Docker Pulls](https://img.shields.io/docker/pulls/securego/gosec.svg)](https://hub.docker.com/r/securego/gosec/tags)
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[![Slack](http://securego.herokuapp.com/badge.svg)](http://securego.herokuapp.com)
## Install
### CI Installation
```bash
# binary will be $(go env GOPATH)/bin/gosec
curl -sfL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/securego/gosec/master/install.sh | sh -s -- -b $(go env GOPATH)/bin vX.Y.Z
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# or install it into ./bin/
curl -sfL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/securego/gosec/master/install.sh | sh -s vX.Y.Z
# In alpine linux (as it does not come with curl by default)
wget -O - -q https://raw.githubusercontent.com/securego/gosec/master/install.sh | sh -s vX.Y.Z
# If you want to use the checksums provided on the "Releases" page
# then you will have to download a tar.gz file for your operating system instead of a binary file
wget https://github.com/securego/gosec/releases/download/vX.Y.Z/gosec_vX.Y.Z_OS.tar.gz
# The file will be in the current folder where you run the command
# and you can check the checksum like this
echo "<check sum from the check sum file> gosec_vX.Y.Z_OS.tar.gz" | sha256sum -c -
gosec --help
```
### GitHub Action
You can run `gosec` as a GitHub action as follows:
```yaml
name: Run Gosec
on:
push:
branches:
- master
pull_request:
branches:
- master
jobs:
tests:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
env:
GO111MODULE: on
steps:
- name: Checkout Source
uses: actions/checkout@v2
- name: Run Gosec Security Scanner
uses: securego/gosec@master
with:
args: ./...
```
### Integrating with code scanning
You can [integrate third-party code analysis tools](https://docs.github.com/en/github/finding-security-vulnerabilities-and-errors-in-your-code/integrating-with-code-scanning) with GitHub code scanning by uploading data as SARIF files.
The workflow shows an example of running the `gosec` as a step in a GitHub action workflow which outputs the `results.sarif` file. The workflow then uploads the `results.sarif` file to GitHub using the `upload-sarif` action.
```yaml
name: "Security Scan"
# Run workflow each time code is pushed to your repository and on a schedule.
# The scheduled workflow runs every at 00:00 on Sunday UTC time.
on:
push:
schedule:
- cron: '0 0 * * 0'
jobs:
tests:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
env:
GO111MODULE: on
steps:
- name: Checkout Source
uses: actions/checkout@v2
- name: Run Gosec Security Scanner
uses: securego/gosec@master
with:
# we let the report trigger content trigger a failure using the GitHub Security features.
args: '-no-fail -fmt sarif -out results.sarif ./...'
- name: Upload SARIF file
uses: github/codeql-action/upload-sarif@v1
with:
# Path to SARIF file relative to the root of the repository
sarif_file: results.sarif
```
### Local Installation
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```bash
go get github.com/securego/gosec/v2/cmd/gosec
```
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## Usage
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Gosec can be configured to only run a subset of rules, to exclude certain file
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paths, and produce reports in different formats. By default all rules will be
run against the supplied input files. To recursively scan from the current
directory you can supply `./...` as the input argument.
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### Available rules
- G101: Look for hard coded credentials
- G102: Bind to all interfaces
- G103: Audit the use of unsafe block
- G104: Audit errors not checked
- G106: Audit the use of ssh.InsecureIgnoreHostKey
- G107: Url provided to HTTP request as taint input
- G108: Profiling endpoint automatically exposed on /debug/pprof
- G109: Potential Integer overflow made by strconv.Atoi result conversion to int16/32
- G110: Potential DoS vulnerability via decompression bomb
- G201: SQL query construction using format string
- G202: SQL query construction using string concatenation
- G203: Use of unescaped data in HTML templates
- G204: Audit use of command execution
- G301: Poor file permissions used when creating a directory
- G302: Poor file permissions used with chmod
- G303: Creating tempfile using a predictable path
- G304: File path provided as taint input
- G305: File traversal when extracting zip/tar archive
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- G306: Poor file permissions used when writing to a new file
- G307: Deferring a method which returns an error
- G401: Detect the usage of DES, RC4, MD5 or SHA1
- G402: Look for bad TLS connection settings
- G403: Ensure minimum RSA key length of 2048 bits
- G404: Insecure random number source (rand)
- G501: Import blocklist: crypto/md5
- G502: Import blocklist: crypto/des
- G503: Import blocklist: crypto/rc4
- G504: Import blocklist: net/http/cgi
- G505: Import blocklist: crypto/sha1
- G601: Implicit memory aliasing of items from a range statement
### Retired rules
- G105: Audit the use of math/big.Int.Exp - [CVE is fixed](https://github.com/golang/go/issues/15184)
### Selecting rules
By default, gosec will run all rules against the supplied file paths. It is however possible to select a subset of rules to run via the `-include=` flag,
or to specify a set of rules to explicitly exclude using the `-exclude=` flag.
```bash
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# Run a specific set of rules
$ gosec -include=G101,G203,G401 ./...
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# Run everything except for rule G303
$ gosec -exclude=G303 ./...
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```
### CWE Mapping
Every issue detected by `gosec` is mapped to a [CWE (Common Weakness Enumeration)](http://cwe.mitre.org/data/index.html) which describes in more generic terms the vulnerability. The exact mapping can be found [here](https://github.com/securego/gosec/blob/master/issue.go#L49).
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### Configuration
A number of global settings can be provided in a configuration file as follows:
```JSON
{
"global": {
"nosec": "enabled",
"audit": "enabled"
}
}
```
- `nosec`: this setting will overwrite all `#nosec` directives defined throughout the code base
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- `audit`: runs in audit mode which enables addition checks that for normal code analysis might be too nosy
```bash
# Run with a global configuration file
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$ gosec -conf config.json .
```
Also some rules accept configuration. For instance on rule `G104`, it is possible to define packages along with a list
of functions which will be skipped when auditing the not checked errors:
```JSON
{
"G104": {
"io/ioutil": ["WriteFile"]
}
}
```
You can also configure the hard-coded credentials rule `G101` with additional patters, or adjust the entropy threshold:
```JSON
{
"G101": {
"pattern": "(?i)passwd|pass|password|pwd|secret|private_key|token",
"ignore_entropy": false,
"entropy_threshold": "80.0",
"per_char_threshold": "3.0",
"truncate": "32"
}
}
```
### Dependencies
gosec will fetch automatically the dependencies of the code which is being analyzed when go module is turned on (e.g.` GO111MODULE=on`). If this is not the case,
the dependencies need to be explicitly downloaded by running the `go get -d` command before the scan.
### Excluding test files and folders
gosec will ignore test files across all packages and any dependencies in your vendor directory.
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The scanning of test files can be enabled with the following flag:
```bash
gosec -tests ./...
```
Also additional folders can be excluded as follows:
```bash
gosec -exclude-dir=rules -exclude-dir=cmd ./...
```
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### Annotating code
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As with all automated detection tools, there will be cases of false positives. In cases where gosec reports a failure that has been manually verified as being safe,
it is possible to annotate the code with a `#nosec` comment.
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The annotation causes gosec to stop processing any further nodes within the
AST so can apply to a whole block or more granularly to a single expression.
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```go
import "md5" // #nosec
func main(){
/* #nosec */
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if x > y {
h := md5.New() // this will also be ignored
}
}
```
When a specific false positive has been identified and verified as safe, you may wish to suppress only that single rule (or a specific set of rules)
within a section of code, while continuing to scan for other problems. To do this, you can list the rule(s) to be suppressed within
the `#nosec` annotation, e.g: `/* #nosec G401 */` or `// #nosec G201 G202 G203`
In some cases you may also want to revisit places where `#nosec` annotations
have been used. To run the scanner and ignore any `#nosec` annotations you
can do the following:
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```bash
gosec -nosec=true ./...
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```
### Build tags
gosec is able to pass your [Go build tags](https://golang.org/pkg/go/build/) to the analyzer.
They can be provided as a comma separated list as follows:
```bash
gosec -tag debug,ignore ./...
```
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### Output formats
gosec currently supports `text`, `json`, `yaml`, `csv`, `sonarqube`, `JUnit XML`, `html` and `golint` output formats. By default
results will be reported to stdout, but can also be written to an output
file. The output format is controlled by the `-fmt` flag, and the output file is controlled by the `-out` flag as follows:
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```bash
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# Write output in json format to results.json
$ gosec -fmt=json -out=results.json *.go
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```
**Note:** gosec generates the [generic issue import format](https://docs.sonarqube.org/latest/analysis/generic-issue/) for SonarQube, and a report has to be imported into SonarQube using `sonar.externalIssuesReportPaths=artifacts/test/gosec-report.json`.
## Development
### Build
You can build the binary with:
```bash
make
```
### Tests
You can run all unit tests using:
```bash
make test
```
### Release
You can create a release by tagging the version as follows:
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``` bash
git tag v1.0.0 -m "Release version v1.0.0"
git push origin v1.0.0
```
The GitHub [release workflow](.github/workflows/release.yml) triggers immediately after the tag is pushed upstream. This flow will
release the binaries using the [goreleaser](https://goreleaser.com/actions/) action and then it will build and publish the docker image into Docker Hub.
### Docker image
You can also build locally the docker image by using the command:
```bash
make image
```
You can run the `gosec` tool in a container against your local Go project. You only have to mount the project
into a volume as follows:
```bash
docker run --rm -it -w /<PROJECT>/ -v <YOUR PROJECT PATH>/<PROJECT>:/<PROJECT> securego/gosec /<PROJECT>/...
```
**Note:** the current working directory needs to be set with `-w` option in order to get successfully resolved the dependencies from go module file
### Generate TLS rule
The configuration of TLS rule can be generated from [Mozilla's TLS ciphers recommendation](https://statics.tls.security.mozilla.org/server-side-tls-conf.json).
First you need to install the generator tool:
```bash
go get github.com/securego/gosec/v2/cmd/tlsconfig/...
```
You can invoke now the `go generate` in the root of the project:
```bash
go generate ./...
```
This will generate the `rules/tls_config.go` file which will contain the current ciphers recommendation from Mozilla.
## Who is using gosec?
This is a [list](USERS.md) with some of the gosec's users.