Simplify OpenSSF Scorecard tracking in your organization with automated markdown and JSON reports, plus optional GitHub issue alerts.
This project is part of OpenSSF Scorecard. Read the announcement for more details.
If you're feeling overwhelmed by an avalanche of scorecards across your organizations, you can breathe easy: automation is here to make your life easier! Scorecard Monitor streamlines the process of keeping track of them all by providing a comprehensive report in Markdown and a local database in JSON with all the scores. To stay on top of any changes in the scores, you can also choose to get notifications through Github Issues.
Please ensure that any repository you wish to track with Scorecard Monitor has already been analyzed by OpenSSF Scorecard at least once. This can be accomplished using the official GitHub Action or the Scorecard CLI.
It's also possible that some repositories in your organization are already being automatically tracked by OpenSSF in this CSV file via weekly cronjob. One caveat: Automatically tracked projects do not include certain checks in their analysis (CI-Tests,Contributors,Dependency-Update-Tool,Webhooks
).
If you're not sure whether a specific project is already using OpenSSF Scorecard, you can always spot-check with the following URL pattern: https://securityscorecards.dev/viewer/?uri=github.com/<ORG_NAME>/<REPO_NAME>
(substitute <ORG_NAME>
and <REPO_NAME>
as appropriate). The Scorecard API is also able to fetch scores for a given repository.
This section is coming soon. If you would like to contribute to the documentation, please feel free to open a pull request for review.
- Easy to use with great customization
- Easy to patch the scoring as the reports includes a direct link to StepSecurity
- Easy way to visualize results with Scorecard Visualizer or deps.dev
- Cutting-edge feature that effortlessly compares OpenSSF scorecards between previous and current commits with The Scorecard Visualizer Comparator
- Discovery mode: list all the repos in one or many organizations that are already being tracked with OpenSSF Scorecard
- Reporting in Markdown with essential information (hash, date, score) and comparative against the prior score
- Self-hosted: The reporting data is stored in JSON format (including previous records) in the repo itself
- Generate an issue (assignation, labels..) with the last changes in the scores, including links to the full report
- Automatically create a pull request for repositories that have branch protection enabled
- Easy to exclude/include new repositories in the scope from any GitHub organization
- Extend the markdown template with you own content by using tags
- Easy to modify the files and ensure the integrity with JSON Schemas
- The report data is exported as an output and can be used in the pipeline
- Great test coverage
- Nodejs: The Node.js Ecosystem Security Working Group is using this pipeline to generate a report with scores for all the repositories in the Node.js org.
- One Beyond: The Maintainers are using this pipeline to generate a scoring report inside a specific document, in order to generate a web version of it
- NodeSecure: The Maintainers are using this pipeline to generate a scoring report and notification issues.
- More users
With the following workflow, you will get the most out of this action:
- Trigger manually or by Cron job every Sunday
- It will scan the org(s) in scope looking for repositories that are available in the OpenSSF Scorecard
- It will store the database and the scope files in the repo
- It will generate an issue if there are changes in the score
name: "OpenSSF Scoring"
on:
# Scheduled trigger
schedule:
# Run every Sunday at 00:00
- cron: "0 0 * * 0"
# Manual trigger
workflow_dispatch:
permissions:
# Write access in order to update the local files with the reports
contents: write
# Write access only required if creating PRs (see Advanced Tips below)
pull-requests: none
# Write access in order to create issues
issues: write
packages: none
jobs:
security-scoring:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v2
- name: OpenSSF Scorecard Monitor
uses: ossf/scorecard-monitor@v2.0.0-beta8
with:
scope: reporting/scope.json
database: reporting/database.json
report: reporting/openssf-scorecard-report.md
auto-commit: true
auto-push: true
generate-issue: true
# The token is needed to create issues, discovery mode and pushing changes in files
github-token: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
discovery-enabled: true
# As an example nodejs Org and Myself
discovery-orgs: 'UlisesGascon,nodejs'
scope
: Defines the path to the file where the scope is defineddatabase
: Defines the path to the JSON file usage to store the scores and comparereport
: Defines the path where the markdown report will be added/updatedauto-commit
: Commits the changes in thedatabase
andreport
filesauto-push
: Pushes the code changes to the branchgenerate-issue
: Creates an issue with the scores that had been updatedissue-title
: Defines the issue titleissue-assignees
: List of assignees for the issueissue-labels
: List of labels for the issuegithub-token
: The token usage to create the issue and push the codemax-request-in-parallel
: Defines the total HTTP Request that can be done in paralleldiscovery-enabled
: Defined if the discovery is enableddiscovery-orgs
: List of organizations to be includes in the discovery, example:discovery-orgs: owasp,nodejs
. The OpenSSF Scorecard API is case sensitive, please use the same organization name as in the GitHub url, like: https://github.com/NodeSecure isNodeSecure
and notnodesecure
. See examplereport-tags-enabled
: Defines if the markdown report must be created/updated around tags by default is disabled. This is useful if the report is going to be include in a file that has other content on it, like docusaurus docs site or similarreport-start-tag
Defines the start tag, default<!-- OPENSSF-SCORECARD-MONITOR:START -->
report-end-tag
: Defines the closing tag, default<!-- OPENSSF-SCORECARD-MONITOR:END -->
render-badge
: Defines if the OpenSSF Scorecard badge must be rendered in the reporter to only show the scorereport-tool
: Defines the reporting review tool in place:scorecard-visualizer
Example ordeps.dev
Example, by defaultscorecard-visualizer
scores
: Score data in JSON format
name: "OpenSSF Scoring"
on:
# ...
permissions:
# ...
jobs:
security-scoring:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v2
- name: OpenSSF Scorecard Monitor
uses: ossf/scorecard-monitor@v2.0.0-beta8
id: openssf-scorecard-monitor
with:
# ....
- name: Print the scores
run: |
echo '${{ steps.openssf-scorecard-monitor.outputs.scores }}'
If you have implemented the recommended branch protection rules from the OpenSSF Scorecard, committing and pushing directly to the main
branch will be impossible. An easy alternative is to extend the pipeline to automatically generate a PR for you:
name: "OpenSSF Scoring"
on:
# ...
permissions:
contents: write
pull-requests: write
issues: write
packages: none
jobs:
security-scoring:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v2
- name: OpenSSF Scorecard Monitor
uses: ossf/scorecard-monitor@v2.0.0-beta8
id: openssf-scorecard-monitor
with:
auto-commit: false
auto-push: false
generate-issue: true
# ....
- name: Print the scores
run: |
echo '${{ steps.openssf-scorecard-monitor.outputs.scores }}'
- name: Create Pull Request
uses: peter-evans/create-pull-request@38e0b6e68b4c852a5500a94740f0e535e0d7ba54 # v4.2.4
with:
token: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
commit-message: OpenSSF Scorecard Report Updated
title: OpenSSF Scorecard Report Updated
body: OpenSSF Scorecard Report Updated
base: main
assignees: ${{ github.actor }}
branch: openssf-scorecard-report-updated
delete-branch: true
If you want to mix the report in markdown format with other content, then you can use report-tags-enabled=true
then report file will use the tags to add/update the report summary without affecting what is before or after the tagged section.
This is very useful for static websites, here is an example using docusaurus.
By default we use <!-- OPENSSF-SCORECARD-MONITOR:START -->
and <!-- OPENSSF-SCORECARD-MONITOR:END -->
, but this can be customize by adding your custom tags as report-start-tag
and report-end-tag
You can control the amount of parallel requests performed against the OpenSSF Scorecard Api by defining any numerical value in max-request-in-parallel
, like max-request-in-parallel=15
.
By default the value is 10, higher values might not be a good use of the API and you can hit some limits, please check with OpenSSF if you want to rise the limits safely.
In some scenarios we want to enable the auto-discovery mode but we want to ignore certain repos, the best way to achieve that is by editing the scope.json
file and add any report that you want to ignore in the excluded
section for that specific organization.
Just for reference, the scope will be stored this way:
File: reporting/scope.json
{
"github.com": {
"included": {
"UlisesGascon":[
"tor-detect-middleware",
"check-my-headers",
"express-simple-pagination"
]
},
"excluded": {
"UlisesGascon": [
"demo-stuff"
]
}
}
}
Just for reference, the database will store the current value and previous values with the date:
{
"github.com": {
"UlisesGascon": {
"check-my-headers": {
"previous": [ {
"score": 6.7,
"date": "2022-08-21"
}],
"current": {
"score": 4.4,
"date": "2022-11-28"
}
}
}
}
}
Please read CONTRIBUTING.md for details on our code of conduct and the process for submitting pull requests to us. You need to accept DCO 1.1 in order to make contributions.