@@ -799,7 +799,7 @@ Incorrect configuration of these values may result in intermittent
or persistent errors, or the Pages Daemon serving old content.
NOTE:
Expiry, interval and timeout flags use [Golang's duration formatting](https://golang.org/pkg/time/#ParseDuration).
Expiry, interval and timeout flags use [Golang's duration formatting](https://pkg.go.dev/time#ParseDuration).
A duration string is a possibly signed sequence of decimal numbers,
each with optional fraction and a unit suffix, such as `300ms`, `1.5h` or `2h45m`.
Valid time units are `ns`, `us` (or `µs`), `ms`, `s`, `m`, `h`.
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@@ -1286,7 +1286,7 @@ in all of your GitLab Pages instances.
### 500 error with `securecookie: failed to generate random iv` and `Failed to save the session`
This problem most likely results from an [out-dated operating system](../package_information/supported_os.md#os-versions-that-are-no-longer-supported).
The [Pages daemon uses the `securecookie` library](https://gitlab.com/search?group_id=9970&project_id=734943&repository_ref=master&scope=blobs&search=securecookie&snippets=false) to get random strings via [`crypto/rand` in Go](https://golang.org/pkg/crypto/rand/#pkg-variables).
The [Pages daemon uses the `securecookie` library](https://gitlab.com/search?group_id=9970&project_id=734943&repository_ref=master&scope=blobs&search=securecookie&snippets=false) to get random strings via [`crypto/rand` in Go](https://pkg.go.dev/crypto/rand#pkg-variables).
This requires the `getrandom` system call or `/dev/urandom` to be available on the host OS.
Upgrading to an [officially supported operating system](https://about.gitlab.com/install/) is recommended.
@@ -18,7 +18,7 @@ For GitLab.com and for GitLab customers, the Container Registry is a critical co
## Current Architecture
The Container Registry is a single [Go](https://golang.org/) application. Its only dependency is the storage backend on which images and metadata are stored.
The Container Registry is a single [Go](https://go.dev/) application. Its only dependency is the storage backend on which images and metadata are stored.
```mermaid
graph LR
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@@ -146,7 +146,7 @@ The interaction between the registry and its clients, including GitLab Rails and
### Database
Following the GitLab [Go standards and style guidelines](../../../development/go_guide), no ORM is used to manage the database, only the [`database/sql`](https://golang.org/pkg/database/sql/) package from the Go standard library, a PostgreSQL driver ([`lib/pq`](https://pkg.go.dev/github.com/lib/pq?tab=doc)) and raw SQL queries, over a TCP connection pool.
Following the GitLab [Go standards and style guidelines](../../../development/go_guide), no ORM is used to manage the database, only the [`database/sql`](https://pkg.go.dev/database/sql) package from the Go standard library, a PostgreSQL driver ([`lib/pq`](https://pkg.go.dev/github.com/lib/pq?tab=doc)) and raw SQL queries, over a TCP connection pool.
The design and development of the registry database adhere to the GitLab [database guidelines](../../../development/database/). Being a Go application, the required tooling to support the database will have to be developed, such as for running database migrations.
[Try a free 30-day trial now](https://about.gitlab.com/free-trial?glm_source=docs.gitlab.com&glm_content=p-ci-cd-external-docs).
[Try a free 30-day trial now](https://about.gitlab.com/free-trial/index.html?glm_source=docs.gitlab.com&glm_content=p-ci-cd-external-docs).
For more information about why you might want to use merge trains, read [How merge trains keep your master green](https://about.gitlab.com/blog/2020/01/30/all-aboard-merge-trains/).
@@ -11,7 +11,7 @@ info: To determine the technical writer assigned to the Stage/Group associated w
INFO:
Want to try out container scanning?
[Get a free 30-day trial of GitLab Ultimate](https://about.gitlab.com/free-trial?glm_source=docs.gitlab.com&glm_content=u-container-scanning-docs).
[Get a free 30-day trial of GitLab Ultimate](https://about.gitlab.com/free-trial/index.html?glm_source=docs.gitlab.com&glm_content=u-container-scanning-docs).
Your application's Docker image may itself be based on Docker images that contain known
vulnerabilities. By including an extra job in your pipeline that scans for those vulnerabilities and
@@ -61,14 +61,14 @@ The browser-based crawler can be configured using CI/CD variables.
| `DAST_BROWSER_NUMBER_OF_BROWSERS` | number | `3` | The maximum number of concurrent browser instances to use. For shared runners on GitLab.com, we recommended a maximum of three. Private runners with more resources may benefit from a higher number, but are likely to produce little benefit after five to seven instances. |
| `DAST_BROWSER_COOKIES` | dictionary | `abtesting_group:3,region:locked` | A cookie name and value to be added to every request. |
| `DAST_BROWSER_LOG` | List of strings | `brows:debug,auth:debug` | A list of modules and their intended log level. |
| `DAST_BROWSER_NAVIGATION_TIMEOUT` | [Duration string](https://golang.org/pkg/time/#ParseDuration) | `15s` | The maximum amount of time to wait for a browser to navigate from one page to another. |
| `DAST_BROWSER_ACTION_TIMEOUT` | [Duration string](https://golang.org/pkg/time/#ParseDuration) | `7s` | The maximum amount of time to wait for a browser to complete an action. |
| `DAST_BROWSER_STABILITY_TIMEOUT` | [Duration string](https://golang.org/pkg/time/#ParseDuration) | `7s` | The maximum amount of time to wait for a browser to consider a page loaded and ready for analysis. |
| `DAST_BROWSER_NAVIGATION_STABILITY_TIMEOUT` | [Duration string](https://golang.org/pkg/time/#ParseDuration) | `7s` | The maximum amount of time to wait for a browser to consider a page loaded and ready for analysis after a navigation completes. |
| `DAST_BROWSER_ACTION_STABILITY_TIMEOUT` | [Duration string](https://golang.org/pkg/time/#ParseDuration) | `800ms` | The maximum amount of time to wait for a browser to consider a page loaded and ready for analysis after completing an action. |
| `DAST_BROWSER_SEARCH_ELEMENT_TIMEOUT` | [Duration string](https://golang.org/pkg/time/#ParseDuration) | `3s` | The maximum amount of time to allow the browser to search for new elements or navigations. |
| `DAST_BROWSER_EXTRACT_ELEMENT_TIMEOUT` | [Duration string](https://golang.org/pkg/time/#ParseDuration) | `5s` | The maximum amount of time to allow the browser to extract newly found elements or navigations. |
| `DAST_BROWSER_ELEMENT_TIMEOUT` | [Duration string](https://golang.org/pkg/time/#ParseDuration) | `600ms` | The maximum amount of time to wait for an element before determining it is ready for analysis. |
| `DAST_BROWSER_NAVIGATION_TIMEOUT` | [Duration string](https://pkg.go.dev/time#ParseDuration) | `15s` | The maximum amount of time to wait for a browser to navigate from one page to another. |
| `DAST_BROWSER_ACTION_TIMEOUT` | [Duration string](https://pkg.go.dev/time#ParseDuration) | `7s` | The maximum amount of time to wait for a browser to complete an action. |
| `DAST_BROWSER_STABILITY_TIMEOUT` | [Duration string](https://pkg.go.dev/time#ParseDuration) | `7s` | The maximum amount of time to wait for a browser to consider a page loaded and ready for analysis. |
| `DAST_BROWSER_NAVIGATION_STABILITY_TIMEOUT` | [Duration string](https://pkg.go.dev/time#ParseDuration) | `7s` | The maximum amount of time to wait for a browser to consider a page loaded and ready for analysis after a navigation completes. |
| `DAST_BROWSER_ACTION_STABILITY_TIMEOUT` | [Duration string](https://pkg.go.dev/time#ParseDuration) | `800ms` | The maximum amount of time to wait for a browser to consider a page loaded and ready for analysis after completing an action. |
| `DAST_BROWSER_SEARCH_ELEMENT_TIMEOUT` | [Duration string](https://pkg.go.dev/time#ParseDuration) | `3s` | The maximum amount of time to allow the browser to search for new elements or navigations. |
| `DAST_BROWSER_EXTRACT_ELEMENT_TIMEOUT` | [Duration string](https://pkg.go.dev/time#ParseDuration) | `5s` | The maximum amount of time to allow the browser to extract newly found elements or navigations. |
| `DAST_BROWSER_ELEMENT_TIMEOUT` | [Duration string](https://pkg.go.dev/time#ParseDuration) | `600ms` | The maximum amount of time to wait for an element before determining it is ready for analysis. |
| `DAST_BROWSER_PAGE_READY_SELECTOR` | selector | `css:#page-is-ready` | Selector that when detected as visible on the page, indicates to the analyzer that the page has finished loading and the scan can continue. Note: When this selector is set, but the element is not found, the scanner waits for the period defined in `DAST_BROWSER_STABILITY_TIMEOUT` before continuing the scan. This can significantly increase scanning time if the element is not present on multiple pages within the site. |
The [DAST variables](index.md#available-cicd-variables)`SECURE_ANALYZERS_PREFIX`, `DAST_FULL_SCAN_ENABLED`, `DAST_AUTO_UPDATE_ADDONS`, `DAST_EXCLUDE_RULES`, `DAST_REQUEST_HEADERS`, `DAST_HTML_REPORT`, `DAST_MARKDOWN_REPORT`, `DAST_XML_REPORT`,
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@@ -100,7 +100,7 @@ You can manage the trade-off between coverage and scan time with the following m
Due to poor network conditions or heavy application load, the default timeouts may not be applicable to your application.
Browser-based scans offer the ability to adjust various timeouts to ensure it continues smoothly as it transitions from one page to the next. These values are configured using a [Duration string](https://golang.org/pkg/time/#ParseDuration), which allow you to configure durations with a prefix: `m` for minutes, `s` for seconds, and `ms` for milliseconds.
Browser-based scans offer the ability to adjust various timeouts to ensure it continues smoothly as it transitions from one page to the next. These values are configured using a [Duration string](https://pkg.go.dev/time#ParseDuration), which allow you to configure durations with a prefix: `m` for minutes, `s` for seconds, and `ms` for milliseconds.
Navigations, or the act of loading a new page, usually require the most amount of time because they are
loading multiple new resources such as JavaScript or CSS files. Depending on the size of these resources, or the speed at which they are returned, the default `DAST_BROWSER_NAVIGATION_TIMEOUT` may not be sufficient.
@@ -16,7 +16,7 @@ SAML on GitLab.com allows users to sign in through their SAML identity provider.
INFO:
Use your own SAML authentication to log in to [GitLab.com](http://gitlab.com/).
[Try GitLab Ultimate free for 30 days](https://about.gitlab.com/free-trial?glm_source=docs.gitlab.com&glm_content=p-saml-sso-docs).
[Try GitLab Ultimate free for 30 days](https://about.gitlab.com/free-trial/index.html?glm_source=docs.gitlab.com&glm_content=p-saml-sso-docs).
User synchronization of SAML SSO groups is supported through [SCIM](scim_setup.md). SCIM supports adding and removing users from the GitLab group automatically.
For example, if you remove a user from the SCIM app, SCIM removes that same user from the GitLab group.