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β—‹
β”‚β•²
β”‚ β—‹
β—‹ β–‘
β–‘    gitleaks

Github Test Follow @zricethezav

Gitleaks is a SAST tool for detecting hardcoded secrets like passwords, api keys, and tokens in git repos. Gitleaks is an easy-to-use, all-in-one solution for detecting secrets, past or present, in your code.

Getting Started

Gitleaks can be installed using Homebrew, Docker, or Go. Gitleaks is also available in binary form for many popular platforms and OS types on the releases page. In addition, Gitleaks can be implemented as a pre-commit hook directly in your repo.

MacOS

brew install gitleaks

Docker

Using the image from DockerHub:

docker pull zricethezav/gitleaks:latest
docker run -v ${path_to_host_folder_to_scan}:/path zricethezav/gitleaks:latest [COMMAND] --source="/path" [OPTIONS]

From Source

  1. Download and install Go from https://golang.org/dl/
  2. Clone the repo
git clone https://github.com/zricethezav/gitleaks.git
  1. Build the binary
cd gitleaks
make build

Usage

Usage:
  gitleaks [command]

Available Commands:
  completion  generate the autocompletion script for the specified shell
  detect      Detect secrets in code
  help        Help about any command
  protect     Protect secrets in code
  version     Display gitleaks version

Flags:
  -c, --config string          config file path
                               order of precedence:
                               1. --config/-c
                               2. (--source/-s)/.gitleaks.toml
                               if --config/-c is not set and no .gitleaks.toml/gitleaks.toml present
                               then .gitleaks.toml will be written to (--source/-s)/.gitleaks.toml for future use
      --exit-code string       exit code when leaks have been encountered (default: 1)
  -h, --help                   help for gitleaks
  -l, --log-level string       log level (debug, info, warn, error, fatal) (default "info")
      --redact                 redact secrets from logs and stdout
  -f, --report-format string   output format (json, csv, sarif)
  -r, --report-path string     report file
  -s, --source string          path to source (git repo, directory, file)
  -v, --verbose                show verbose output from scan

Use "gitleaks [command] --help" for more information about a command.

Commands

There are two commands you will use to detect secrets; detect and protect.

Detect

The detect command is used to scan repos, directories, and files. This comand can be used on developer machines and in CI environments.

When running detect on a git repository, gitleaks will parse the output of a git log -p command (you can see how this executed here). git log -p generates patches which gitleaks will use to detect secrets. You can configure what commits git log will range over by using the --log-opts flag. --log-opts accepts any option for git log -p. For example, if you wanted to run gitleaks on a range of commits you could use the following command: gitleaks --source . --log-opts="--all commitA..commitB". See the git log documentation for more information.

You can scan files and directories by using the --no-git option.

Protect

The protect command is used to uncommitted changes in a git repo. This command should be used on developer machines in accordance with shifting left on security. When running detect on a git repository, gitleaks will parse the output of a git diff command (you can see how this executed here). You can set the --staged flag to check for changes in commits that have been git added. The --staged flag should be used when running Gitleaks as a pre-commit.

NOTE: the protect command can only be used on git repos, running protect on files or directories will result in an error message.

Verify Findings

You can verify a finding found by gitleaks using a git log command. Example output:

{
        "Description": "AWS",
        "StartLine": 37,
        "EndLine": 37,
        "StartColumn": 19,
        "EndColumn": 38,
        "Context": "\t\t\"aws_secret= \\\"AKIAIMNOJVGFDXXXE4OA\\\"\":          true,",
        "Secret": "AKIAIMNOJVGFDXXXE4OA",
        "File": "checks_test.go",
        "Commit": "ec2fc9d6cb0954fb3b57201cf6133c48d8ca0d29",
        "Entropy": 0,
        "Author": "zricethezav",
        "Email": "thisispublicanyways@gmail.com",
        "Date": "2018-01-28 17:39:00 -0500 -0500",
        "Message": "[update] entropy check",
        "Tags": [],
        "RuleID": "aws-access-token"
}

We can use the following format to verify the leak:

git log -L {StartLine,EndLine}:{File} {Commit}

So in this example it would look like:

git log -L 37,37:checks_test.go ec2fc9d6cb0954fb3b57201cf6133c48d8ca0d29

Which gives us:

commit ec2fc9d6cb0954fb3b57201cf6133c48d8ca0d29
Author: zricethezav <thisispublicanyways@gmail.com>
Date:   Sun Jan 28 17:39:00 2018 -0500

    [update] entropy check

diff --git a/checks_test.go b/checks_test.go
--- a/checks_test.go
+++ b/checks_test.go
@@ -28,0 +37,1 @@
+               "aws_secret= \"AKIAIMNOJVGFDXXXE4OA\"":          true,

Pre-Commit hook

You can run Gitleaks as a pre-commit hook by copying the example pre-commit.py script into your .git/hooks/ directory.

Configuration

Gitleaks offers a configuration format you can follow to write your own secret detection rules:

# Title for the gitleaks configuration file. 
title = "Gitleaks title"

# An array of tables that contain information that define instructions
# on how to detect secrets 
[[rules]]
# Unique identifier for this rule
id = "awesome-rule-1"
# Short human readable description of the rule.
description = "awsome rule 1" 
# Golang regular expression used to detect secrets. Note Golang's regex engine
# does not support lookaheads.
regex = '''one-go-style-regex-for-this-rule''' 
# Golang regular expression used to match paths. This can be used as a standalone rule or it can be used
# in conjunction with a valid `regex` entry.
path = '''a-file-path-regex'''
# Array of strings used for metadata and reporting purposes.
tags = ["tag","another tag"]
# Int used to check shannon entropy of a specific group in a regex match. 
entropyGroup = 3
# Float representing the minimum shannon entropy a regex group must have to be considered a secret. 
entropy = 3.5
# You can include an allowlist table for a single rule to reduce false positives or ignore commits
# with known/rotated secrets
[rules.allowlist]
description = "ignore commit A"
commits = [ "commit-A", "commit-B"]
paths = ['''one-file-path-regex''']
regexes = ['''one-regex-within-the-already-matched-regex''']

# This is a global allowlist which has a higher order of precendence than rule-specific allowlists.
# If a commit listed in the `commits` field below is encountered then that commit will be skipped and no 
# secrets will be detected for said commit. The same logic applies for regexes and paths.
[allowlist]
description = "ignore commit A"
commits = [ "commit-A", "commit-B"]
paths = ['''one-file-path-regex''']
regexes = ['''one-regex-within-the-already-matched-regex''']

Refer to the default gitleaks config for examples and advice on writing regular expressions for secret detection.

Exit Codes

You can always set the exit code when leaks are encountered with the --exit-code flag. Default exit codes below:

0 - no leaks present
1 - leaks or error encountered