Nikto scanner reference
You can scan your instances using Nikto, an open-source scanner that runs tests against web servers to detect dangerous files/programs, outdated server versions, and problems with specific server releases.
Before you begin
Docker-in-Docker requirements
Docker-in-Docker is not required for ingestion workflows where the scan data has already been generated.
You need to include a Docker-in-Docker background service in your stage if either of these conditions apply:
- You configured your scanner using a generic Security step rather than a scanner-specific template such as Aqua Trivy, Bandit, Mend, Snyk, etc.
- You’re scanning a container image using an Orchestration or Extraction workflow.
Set up a Docker-in-Docker background step
Go to the stage where you want to run the scan.
In Overview, add the shared path
/var/run
.In Execution, do the following:
- Click Add Step and then choose Background.
- Configure the Background step as follows:
- Dependency Name =
dind
- Container Registry = The Docker connector to download the DinD image. If you don't have one defined, go to Docker connector settings reference.
- Image =
docker:dind
- Under Optional Configuration, select the Privileged checkbox.
- Dependency Name =
Root access requirements
You need to run the scan step with root access if either of the following apply:
You need to run a Docker-in-Docker background service.
You need to add trusted certificates to your scan images at runtime.
You can set up your STO scan images and pipelines to run scans as non-root and establish trust for your own proxies using self-signed certificates. For more information, go to Configure STO to Download Images from a Private Registry.
Nikto step configuration
The recommended workflow is add a Nikto step to a Security Tests or CI Build stage and then configure it as described below. You can also configure scans programmatically by copying, pasting, and editing the YAML definition.
- UI configuration support is currently limited to a subset of scanners. Extending UI support to additional scanners is on the Harness engineering roadmap.
- Each scanner template shows only the options that apply to a specific scan. If you're setting up a repository scan, for example, the UI won't show Container Image settings.
- Docker-in-Docker is not required for these steps unless you're scanning a container image. If you're scanning a repository using Bandit, for example, you don't need to set up a Background step running DinD.
- Support is currently limited to Kubernetes and Harness Cloud AMD64 build infrastructures only.
Scan settings
Scan Mode
The orchestration mode to use for the scan. The following list includes the UI and YAML values for the supported options.
- Orchestrated A fully-orchestrated scan. A Security step in the Harness pipeline orchestrates a scan and then normalizes and compresses the results.
- Ingestion Ingestion scans are not orchestrated. The Security step ingest results from a previous scan (for a scan run in an previous step) and then normallizes and compresses the results.
Scan Configuration
The predefined configuration to use for the scan. All scan steps have at least one configuration.
Target Settings
Type
- Instance Scan a running application.
Name
The Identifier that you want to assign to the target you’re scanning in the pipeline. Use a unique, descriptive name such as codebaseAlpha
or jsmith/myalphaservice
. Using descriptive target names will make it much easier to navigate your scan data in the STO UI.
Variant
An identifier for a specific variant to scan, such as the branch name or image tag. This identifier is used to differentiate or group results for a target. Harness maintains a historical trend for each variant.
You can see the target name, type, and variant in the Test Targets UI:
Instance settings
Domain
Domain of the application instance to scan. You can include the full path to the app in this field, or split the full path between the Domain and the Path fields. Example: https://myapp.io/portal/us
Protocol
HTTPS (default) or HTTP.
Port
The TCP port used by the scanned app instance.
Path
Path to append to the application instance domain, if you're splitting the full path between the Domain and Path settings. For example, you might specify the domain as https://myapp.io
and the path as /portal/us
.
Log Level, CLI flags, and Fail on Severity
Log Level
The minimum severity of the messages you want to include in your scan logs. You can specify one of the following:
- DEBUG
- INFO
- WARNING
- ERROR
Additional CLI Flags
You can use this field to run the nikto scanner with specific command-line arguments. For example, you can customize the tests that the scanner runs with the -Tuning
argument. The following example excludes a test from the scan: -Tuning x01
Fail on Severity
Every Security step has a Fail on Severity setting. If the scan finds any vulnerability with the specified severity level or higher, the pipeline fails automatically. You can specify one of the following:
CRITICAL
HIGH
MEDIUM
LOW
INFO
NONE
— Do not fail on severity
The YAML definition looks like this: fail_on_severity : critical # | high | medium | low | info | none
Additional Configuration
In the Additional Configuration settings, you can use the following options:
Advanced settings
In the Advanced settings, you can use the following options:
Security step settings (deprecated)
You can set up Nikto scans using a Security step: create a CI Build or Security Tests stage, add a Security step, and then add the setting:value
pairs as specified below.
Target and variant
The following settings are required for every Security step:
target_name
A user-defined label for the code repository, container, application, or configuration to scan.variant
A user-defined label for the branch, tag, or other target variant to scan.
Make sure that you give unique, descriptive names for the target and variant. This makes navigating your scan results in the STO UI much easier.
You can see the target name, type, and variant in the Test Targets UI:
For more information, go to Targets, baselines, and variants in STO.
Nexus scan settings
product_name
=nikto
scan_type
=instance
policy_type
=orchestratedScan
oringestionOnly
product_config_name
- Accepted values(s):
default
(Scan the host on port 80)nikto-full
(Scan the host on ports 80 and 443 with-Tuning 9
)nikto-full-web
(Scan the host on ports 80 and 443)
- Accepted values(s):
fail_on_severity
- See Fail on Severity.tool_args
— You can use this field to run the nikto scanner with specific command-line arguments. For example, you can customize the tests that the scanner runs with the-Tuning
argument. The following example excludes a test from the scan:tool_args
=-Tuning x01
Instance scan settings
The following settings apply to Security steps where the scan_type
is instance
.
instance_domain
instance_path
instance_protocol
instance_port
instance_username
The username for authenticating with the external scanner.instance_password
You should create a Harness text secret with your encrypted password and reference the secret using the format<+secrets.getValue("project.container-access-id")>
. For more information, go to Add and reference text secrets.
Ingestion file
The following setting is required for Security steps where the policy_type
is ingestionOnly
.
ingestion_file
The results data file to use when running an Ingestion scan. You should specify the full path to the data file in your workspace, such as/shared/customer_artifacts/my_scan_results.json
. STO steps can ingest scan data in SARIF and Harness Custom JSON format.
The following steps outline the general workflow for ingesting scan data into your pipeline:
Specify a shared folder for your scan results, such as
/shared/customer_artifacts
. You can do this in the Overview tab of the Security stage where you're ingesting your data.Create a Run step that copies your scan results to the shared folder. You can run your scan externally, before you run the build, or set up the Run step to run the scan and then copy the results.
Add a Security step after the Run step and add the
target name
,variant
, andingestion_file
settings as described above.
For a complete workflow description and example, go to Ingest Scan Results into an STO Pipeline.