ggshield: protect your code with GitGuardian
ggshield
is a CLI application that runs in your local environment or in a CI environment to help you detect more than 350+ types of secrets, as well as other potential security vulnerabilities or policy breaks affecting your codebase.
ggshield
uses our public API through py-gitguardian to scan and detect potential vulnerabilities in files and other text content.
Only metadata such as call time, request size and scan mode is stored from scans using ggshield
, therefore secrets and policy breaks incidents will not be displayed on your dashboard and your files and secrets won't be stored.
- Installation
- Initial setup
- Getting started
- Integrations
- Learn more
- Output
- Related open source projects
- License
You can install ggshield
using Homebrew by running the following command:
$ brew install gitguardian/tap/ggshield
Deb and RPM packages are available on Cloudsmith.
Setup instructions:
$ pip install ggshield
ggshield
supports Python 3.8 and newer.
The package should run on MacOS, Linux and Windows.
To update ggshield
you can add the option -U/--upgrade
to the pip install command.
$ pip install -U ggshield
To use ggshield
you need to authenticate against GitGuardian servers. To do so, use the ggshield auth login
command. This command automates the provisioning of a personal access token and its configuration on the local workstation.
You can learn more about it from ggshield auth login
documentation.
Alternatively, you can create your personal access token manually and you can store it in the GITGUARDIAN_API_KEY
environment variable to complete the setup.
You can now use ggshield
to search for secrets:
- in files:
ggshield secret scan path -r .
- in repositories:
ggshield secret scan repo .
- in Docker images:
ggshield secret scan docker ubuntu:22.04
- in Pypi packages:
ggshield secret scan pypi flask
- and more, have a look at
ggshield secret scan --help
output for details.
You can also search for vulnerabilities in your IaC files using the following command:
ggshield iac scan all .
However, if you are only interested in new potential IaC vulnerabilities, you can run:
ggshield iac scan diff --ref=HEAD~1 .
Have a look at ggshield iac scan --help
for more details.
You can integrate ggshield
in your CI/CD workflow.
To catch errors earlier, use ggshield
as a pre-commit, pre-push or pre-receive Git hook.
For more information, have a look at the documentation
If no secrets or policy breaks have been found, the exit code will be 0:
$ ggshield secret scan pre-commit
If a secret or other issue is found in your staged code or in your CI, you will have an alert giving you the type of policy break, the filename where the policy break has been found and a patch giving you the position of the policy break in the file:
$ ggshield secret scan pre-commit
🛡️ ⚔️ 🛡️ 2 policy breaks have been found in file production.rb
11 | config.paperclip_defaults = {
12 | :s3_credentials => {
13 | :bucket => "XXX",
14 | :access_key_id => "XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX",
|_____AWS Keys_____|
15 | :secret_access_key => "XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX"
|_______________AWS Keys_______________|
16 | }
17 | }
Lines that are too long are truncated to match the size of the terminal, unless the verbose mode is used (-v
or --verbose
).
ggshield
is MIT licensed.