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Hardening - CI/CD Recommendations

General hardening guidelines and philosophies are outlined in the main hardening documentation.

The hardening recommendations and concepts for CI/CD are listed below.

Basic Recommendations

How you configure the different CI/CD settings depends on your use of CI/CD. For example if you are using it to build packages, you often need real-time access to external resources such as Docker images or external code repositories. If you are using it for Infrastructure as Code (IaC), you often need to store credentials for external systems to automate deployment. For these and many other scenarios, you need to store potentially sensitive information to be used during CI/CD operations. As the individual scenarios themselves are numerous, we have summarized some basic information to help harden the CI/CD process.

  • Secrets Management. Passwords, tokens, keys, and other secrets that require any level of protection should never be stored in plaintext. Some type of encrypted container technology should be used, such as GCP Secret Manager, AWS KMS, or HashiCorp Vault. For self-managed and standalone instances, HashiCorp Vault is recommended, and many GitLab features can take advantage of Vault and are well documented in the main Documentation. For detailed CI/CD examples, see using external secrets in CI.
  • External Communications. If your CI/CD process requires connectivity to other hosts, ensure that these communication channels are encrypted. You should use TLS 1.2 or 1.3, and where possible implement mutual TLS.
  • Logging. Logging can be very important for auditing and troubleshooting, so it is important that you enable any logging features to ensure you are getting the information in logs you need. Make sure through periodic testing that plaintext secrets or other sensitive information is not inadvertently added to log files.

Specific Recommendations

Pipelines

Pipelines are a part of jobs that execute steps in stages to automate tasks on behalf of the users of a project. They are a core component of CD/CD.

By default, only the default branch gets a protected pipeline. An owner of a project can ensure that other branches are protected by configuring a protected branch. This allows for more restricted security on pipelines. For more information, see pipeline security on a protected branch.

Deployment is the part of the CI/CD that deploys the results of the pipeline in relationship to a given environment. Default settings do not impose many restrictions, and as different users with different roles and responsibilities can trigger pipelines that can interact with those environments, you should restrict these environments. For more information, see protected environments.