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build(deps): bump fortify/gha-export-vulnerabilities from fcb374411cff9809028c911dabb8b57dbdae623b to d2838d7a21c0499504efe8f384573f51bea799e0 #199

build(deps): bump fortify/gha-export-vulnerabilities from fcb374411cff9809028c911dabb8b57dbdae623b to d2838d7a21c0499504efe8f384573f51bea799e0

build(deps): bump fortify/gha-export-vulnerabilities from fcb374411cff9809028c911dabb8b57dbdae623b to d2838d7a21c0499504efe8f384573f51bea799e0 #199

Workflow file for this run

# This workflow uses actions that are not certified by GitHub.
# They are provided by a third-party and are governed by
# separate terms of service, privacy policy, and support
# documentation.
# A sample workflow which sets up Snyk to analyze the full Snyk platform (Snyk Open Source, Snyk Code,
# Snyk Container and Snyk Infrastructure as Code)
# The setup installs the Snyk CLI - for more details on the possible commands
# check https://docs.snyk.io/snyk-cli/cli-reference
# The results of Snyk Code are then uploaded to GitHub Security Code Scanning
#
# In order to use the Snyk Action you will need to have a Snyk API token.
# More details in https://github.com/snyk/actions#getting-your-snyk-token
# or you can signup for free at https://snyk.io/login
#
# For more examples, including how to limit scans to only high-severity issues
# and fail PR checks, see https://github.com/snyk/actions/
name: Snyk Security
on:
push:
branches: ["master" ]
pull_request:
branches: ["master"]
permissions:
contents: read
jobs:
snyk:
permissions:
contents: read # for actions/checkout to fetch code
security-events: write # for github/codeql-action/upload-sarif to upload SARIF results
actions: read # only required for a private repository by github/codeql-action/upload-sarif to get the Action run status
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- name: Harden Runner
uses: step-security/harden-runner@63c24ba6bd7ba022e95695ff85de572c04a18142 # v2.7.0
with:
egress-policy: audit
- uses: actions/checkout@b4ffde65f46336ab88eb53be808477a3936bae11 # v4.1.1
- name: Set up Snyk CLI to check for security issues
# Snyk can be used to break the build when it detects security issues.
# In this case we want to upload the SAST issues to GitHub Code Scanning
uses: snyk/actions/setup@806182742461562b67788a64410098c9d9b96adb
# For Snyk Open Source you must first set up the development environment for your application's dependencies
# For example for Node
#- uses: actions/setup-node@v3
# with:
# node-version: 16
env:
# This is where you will need to introduce the Snyk API token created with your Snyk account
SNYK_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.SNYK_TOKEN }}
# Runs Snyk Code (SAST) analysis and uploads result into GitHub.
# Use || true to not fail the pipeline
- name: Snyk Code test
run: snyk code test --sarif > snyk-code.sarif # || true
# Runs Snyk Open Source (SCA) analysis and uploads result to Snyk.
- name: Snyk Open Source monitor
run: snyk monitor --all-projects
# Runs Snyk Infrastructure as Code (IaC) analysis and uploads result to Snyk.
# Use || true to not fail the pipeline.
- name: Snyk IaC test and report
run: snyk iac test --report # || true
# Build the docker image for testing
- name: Build a Docker image
run: docker build -t your/image-to-test .
# Runs Snyk Container (Container and SCA) analysis and uploads result to Snyk.
- name: Snyk Container monitor
run: snyk container monitor your/image-to-test --file=Dockerfile
# Push the Snyk Code results into GitHub Code Scanning tab
- name: Upload result to GitHub Code Scanning
uses: github/codeql-action/upload-sarif@2f93e4319b2f04a2efc38fa7f78bd681bc3f7b2f # v2.23.2
with:
sarif_file: snyk-code.sarif