Travis CI flaw exposed secrets of thousands of open source projects

Travis CI flaw exposed secrets of thousands of open source projects

Enlarge (credit: Getty Images)

A security flaw in Travis CI potentially exposed secrets of thousands of open source projects that rely on the hosted continuous integration service. Travis CI is a software-testing solution used by over 900,000 open source projects and 600,000 users. However, a vulnerability in the tool made it possible for secure environment variables—signing keys, access credentials, and API tokens of all public open source projects—to be exfiltrated.

Worse, the dev community is upset about the poor handling of the vulnerability disclosure process and a thinly worded "security bulletin" it had to force out of Travis.

Environment variables injected into PR builds

Travis CI is a popular choice of software-testing tool among developers due to its seamless integration with GitHub and Bitbucket. As the makers of the tool explain:

Read 16 remaining paragraphs | Comments



from Tech – Ars Technica https://ift.tt/3nxQ6rZ

Comments