IaC scans with Wiz
You can easily set up a Wiz step to run automated scans in your Harness pipeline. This step scans the IaC repository you specify using the Wiz CLI. Then it correlates, deduplicates, and ingests the scan results into Harness. You can see your scan results in the Security Tests tab of the pipeline execution.
Important notes for running Wiz scans in STO
- You can set up your STO scan images and pipelines to run scans as non-root and establish trust for your own proxies using custom certificates. For more information, go to Configure STO to Download Images from a Private Registry.
The following topics contain useful information for setting up scanner integrations in STO:
Set-up workflows
Orchestration scans for IaC repositories
Prerequisites
-
You can run STO scans in Harness Cloud, which requires no setup. You can also use a Kubernetes or Docker build infrastructure.
-
Harness text secrets for your
client-id
andclient-secret
to authenticate with the Wiz CLI
Add the Wiz scanner
Do the following:
- Add a Security, Build, or Infrastructure stage to your pipeline.
- Add a Wiz step to the stage.
Set up the Wiz scanner
Required settings
- Scan mode = Orchestration
- Scan configuration = Wiz IaC
- Target type = Repository
- Target and Variant Detection = Auto
- Authentication:
- Wiz access ID as a Harness secret. This is your
client-id
to authenticate with the Wiz CLI. - Wiz access token as a Harness secret. This is your
client-secret
to authenticate with the Wiz CLI.
- Wiz access ID as a Harness secret. This is your
Optional settings
- Fail on Severity — Stop the pipeline if the scan detects any issues at a specified severity or higher
- Log Level — Useful for debugging
Ingestion scans for IaC repositories
Harness STO can ingest both JSON and SARIF data from Wiz, but Harness recommends publishing to JSON because this format includes more detailed information.
Add a shared path for your scan results
- Add a Security, Build, or Infrastructure stage to your pipeline.
- In the stage Overview, add a shared path such as
/shared/scan_results
.
Copy scan results to the shared path
There are two primary workflows to do this:
-
Add a Run step that runs a Wiz scan from the command line and then copies the results to the shared path.
-
Copy results from a Wiz scan that ran outside the pipeline.
For more information and examples, go to Ingestion scans.
Set up the Wiz scanner
Add a Wiz step to the stage and set it up as follows.
Required settings
- Scan mode = Ingestion
- Scan configuration = Wiz IaC
- Target type = Repository
- Target name — Usually the repo name
- Target variant — Usually the scanned branch. You can also use a runtime input and specify the branch at runtime.
- Ingestion file — For example,
/shared/scan_results/wiz-iac-scan.json
Optional settings
- Fail on Severity — Stop the pipeline if the scan detects any issues at a specified severity or higher.
- Log Level — Useful for debugging
Wiz step settings reference
Scan
Scan Mode
- Orchestration Configure the step to run a scan and then ingest, normalize, and deduplicate the results.
- Ingestion Configure the step to read scan results from a data file and then ingest, normalize, and deduplicate the data.
Scan Configuration
Select Wiz IaC.
Target
Type
-
Repository Scan a codebase repo.
In most cases, you specify the codebase using a code repo connector that connects to the Git account or repository where your code is stored. For information, go to Configure codebase.
Target and Variant Detection
When Auto is enabled for code repositories, the step detects these values using git
:
- To detect the target, the step runs
git config --get remote.origin.url
. - To detect the variant, the step runs
git rev-parse --abbrev-ref HEAD
. The default assumption is that theHEAD
branch is the one you want to scan.
Note the following:
- Auto is not available when the Scan Mode is Ingestion.
- Auto is the default selection for new pipelines. Manual is the default for old pipelines, but you might find that neither radio button is selected in the UI.
Name
The identifier for the target such codebaseAlpha
. Descriptive target names make it much easier to navigate your scan data in the STO UI.
It is good practice to specify a baseline for every target.
Variant
The identifier for the specific variant to scan. This is usually the branch name, image tag, or product version. Harness maintains a historical trend for each variant.
Workspace
The workspace path on the pod running the scan step. The workspace path is /harness
by default.
You can override this if you want to scan only a subset of the workspace. For example, suppose the pipeline publishes artifacts to a subfolder /tmp/artifacts
and you want to scan these artifacts only. In this case, you can specify the workspace path as /harness/tmp/artifacts
.
Ingestion File
The path to your scan results when running an Ingestion scan, for example /shared/scan_results/wiz.latest.json
.
-
The data file must be in a supported format for the scanner.
-
The data file must be accessible to the scan step. It's good practice to save your results files to a shared path in your stage. In the visual editor, go to the stage where you're running the scan. Then go to Overview > Shared Paths. You can also add the path to the YAML stage definition like this:
- stage:
spec:
sharedPaths:
- /shared/scan_results
Authentication
Access ID
This is your client-id
to authenticate with the Wiz CLI.
Access Token
This is your client-secret
to authenticate with the Wiz CLI.
You should create a Harness text secret with your encrypted token and reference the secret using the format <+secrets.getValue("my-access-token")>
. For more information, go to Add and Reference Text Secrets.
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
Use this field to run the scanner binary with additional flags supported by the external scanner.
Passing CLI flags is an advanced feature. Some flags might not work in the context of STO. You should test your flags and arguments thoroughly before you use them in your production environment.
Fail on Severity
Every Custom Scan 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
Settings
You can add more settings to the scan step as needed.
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: