Skip to content

Github Action for integrating Security Alerts with JIRA

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

reload/github-security-jira

Use this GitHub action with your project
Add this Action to an existing workflow or create a new one
View on Marketplace

Repository files navigation

github-security-jira

GitHub Action for mapping Dependabot security alerts to Jira tickets.

Setup

You need the following pieces set up to sync alerts with Jira:

  1. Two repo secrets containing a GitHub access token and a Jira API token, respectively.
  2. A workflow file which runs the action on a schedule, continually creating new tickets when necessary.

Repo secrets

The reload/github-security-jira action requires you to create two encrypted secrets in the repo:

  1. A secret called GitHubSecurityToken which should contain a Personal Access Token for the GitHub user under which this action should be executed. The token must include the public_repo scope if checking only public repos, or the repo scope for use on private repos. Also, the user must have access to security alerts in the repo.
  2. A secret called JiraApiToken containing an API Token for the Jira user that should be used to create tickets.

Workflow file setup

The GitHub workflow file should reside in any repo where you want to sync security alerts with Jira.

It has some required and some optional settings, which are passed to the action as environment variables:

  • GH_SECURITY_TOKEN: A reference to the repo secret GitHubSecurityToken (REQUIRED)
  • JIRA_TOKEN: A reference to the repo secret JiraApiToken (REQUIRED)
  • JIRA_HOST: The endpoint for your Jira instance, e.g. https://foo.atlassian.net (REQUIRED)
  • JIRA_USER: The ID of the Jira user which is associated with the 'JiraApiToken' secret, eg 'someuser@reload.dk' (REQUIRED)
  • JIRA_PROJECT: The project key for the Jira project where issues should be created, eg TEST or ABC. (REQUIRED)
  • JIRA_ISSUE_TYPE: Type of issue to create, e.g. Security. Defaults to Bug. (Optional)
  • JIRA_WATCHERS: Jira users to add as watchers to tickets. Separate multiple watchers with comma (no spaces).
  • JIRA_ISSUE_LABELS: Jira labels to add to tickets. Separate multiple labels with comma (no spaces).
  • JIRA_RESTRICTED_COMMENT_ROLE: A comment with restricted visibility to this role is posted with info about who was added as watchers to the issue. Defaults to Developers. (Optional)

Here is an example setup which runs this action every 6 hours.

name: GitHub Security Alerts for Jira

on:
  schedule:
    - cron: '0 */6 * * *'

jobs:
  syncSecurityAlerts:
    runs-on: ubuntu-latest
    steps:
      - name: "Sync security alerts to Jira issues"
        uses: reload/github-security-jira@v1.x
        env:
          GH_SECURITY_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.GitHubSecurityToken }}
          JIRA_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.JiraApiToken }}
          JIRA_HOST: https://foo.atlassian.net
          JIRA_USER: someuser@reload.dk
          JIRA_PROJECT: ABC
          JIRA_ISSUE_TYPE: Security
          JIRA_WATCHERS: someuser@reload.dk,someotheruser@reload.dk

Local development

Copy docker-composer.override.example.yml to docker-composer.override.yml and edit according to your settings.

After that, you can execute the Symfony console app like so:

docker-compose run --rm ghsec-jira --verbose --dry-run

Remove the --dry-run option to actually create issues in Jira.