This site is the archived OWASP Foundation Wiki and is no longer accepting Account Requests.
To view the new OWASP Foundation website, please visit https://owasp.org

OWASP AppSec Pipeline

From OWASP
Revision as of 00:49, 5 October 2015 by Aaron.weaver2 (talk | contribs) (Description)

Jump to: navigation, search
OWASP Project Header.jpg

The OWASP AppSec Pipeline Project

The OWASP AppSec Pipeline Project is the place to find the information you need to increase the speed and automation of your AppSec program. Using the documentation and references of this project will allow you to setup your own AppSec Pipeline.

Description

The AppSec pipeline project is a place to gather together information, techniques and tools to create your own AppSec Pipeline. AppSec Pipelines take the principals of DevOps and Lean and applies that to an application security program. The project will gather references, cheat sheets, and specific guidance for tools/software which would compose an AppSec Pipeline.

Licensing

The OWASP AppSec Pipeline Project documentation is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 license, so you can copy, distribute and transmit the work, and you can adapt it, and use it commercially, but all provided that you attribute the work and if you alter, transform, or build upon this work, you may distribute the resulting work only under the same or similar license to this one.

What is OWASP Security Principles Project?

The AppSec pipeline project is a place to gather together information, techniques and tools to create your own AppSec Pipeline.

Project Leaders

Matt Tesauro
Aaron Weaver
Matt Konda

Related Projects

OWASP_Web_Testing_Environment_Project

Quick Download

Bag of Holding

News and Events

Catch our next presentation at Velocity New York

In Print

Building an AppSec Pipeline
Taking DevOps practices into your AppSec Life

Classifications

New projects.png Owasp-breakers-small.png
Owasp-defenders-small.png
Cc-button-y-sa-small.png
Project Type Files DOC.jpg

Project Type Files CODE.jpg

Project Type Files TOOL.jpg


What are DevOp Security Pipeline Tools?

DevOp security pipeline tools are written with the mindset of API first. The goal is that a security tool will expose all the core functionality of the product as an API. Tools need to have an API so that the 'All the things' can be automated. Each tool will be evaluated with the criteria outlined below including example pipeline use cases.

Evaluation Criteria

Application Description: Overview of the security tool, description and product web page.
API: The type of API (REST, SOAP), API coverage (% of total features available via the API) and API Docs.
Pipeline Position: Where in the AppSec pipeline the tool would be best suited to reside
Cloud Scalable: Is the tool cloud aware and can the tool scale based on demand?
Runs as a Service: Can the tool run as a service or in headless mode?
Pipeline Example: Link to an example use case of the tool in the pipeline
Client Libraries: What client libraries are written to assist in integration. For example a python or Go library.
CI/CD Plugins: Does the tool have CI/CD plugins for integration into a DevOps pipeline. For example a Jenkins plugin.
Data Sent to the Cloud: What kind of data, if any, is sent off premise to the cloud? Is there an option to keep all data in-house?

Results

We are currently working on gathering a list of the current tools and evaluating each tool based on the criteria listed. The goal is to create a one page wiki document of the application.

Get Involved

Interested in participating or having your product included in the review? Contact Aaron Weaver

What is an AppSec Pipeline?

Rugged DevOps AppSec Pipeline Template
Example Rugged DevOps AppSec Pipeline
Example AppSec Pipeline















The specific tools used in a pipeline aren't the important part - its making your AppSec engagements as efficient as possible.

AppSec Pipeline Presentations

Rugged DevOp Interviews

Rugged DevOps

TBD

Got a question?

Ask us on Twitter:

Contributors

Besides the project leaders, contributions have been made by:

  • Adam Parsons - Bag of Holding
  • Matt Brown - suggestions and review of Bag of Holding
  • Lee Thurlow - suggestions and review of Bag of Holding

Future releases will include:

  • List of open source tools for each portion of the AppSec Pipeline
  • Additional releases of Bag of Holding with new and exciting features
  • Documentation and references to integration of the various pieces of the AppSec Pipeline.