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authorGitLab Bot <gitlab-bot@gitlab.com>2022-11-15 12:09:33 +0300
committerGitLab Bot <gitlab-bot@gitlab.com>2022-11-15 12:09:33 +0300
commit25fdad39f53eb46b346076fd07bc2db9bc1d8ccb (patch)
treeb2aec078df9f1414ff11e0940558fa2d8377000a /doc/user
parentfbea3a224e10049658a7c31bbe7455dc43a4456e (diff)
Add latest changes from gitlab-org/gitlab@master
Diffstat (limited to 'doc/user')
-rw-r--r--doc/user/application_security/configuration/index.md2
-rw-r--r--doc/user/application_security/dast/browser_based.md6
-rw-r--r--doc/user/application_security/dast/dast_troubleshooting.md2
-rw-r--r--doc/user/application_security/dast/index.md1444
-rw-r--r--doc/user/application_security/dast/proxy-based.md1247
-rw-r--r--doc/user/application_security/dast_api/index.md4
-rw-r--r--doc/user/application_security/index.md2
-rw-r--r--doc/user/application_security/policies/scan-execution-policies.md8
-rw-r--r--doc/user/permissions.md2
-rw-r--r--doc/user/project/integrations/slack.md2
10 files changed, 1355 insertions, 1364 deletions
diff --git a/doc/user/application_security/configuration/index.md b/doc/user/application_security/configuration/index.md
index 5eb1b93eb76..d9ba4640855 100644
--- a/doc/user/application_security/configuration/index.md
+++ b/doc/user/application_security/configuration/index.md
@@ -55,7 +55,7 @@ You can configure the following security controls:
- [Dynamic Application Security Testing](../dast/index.md) (DAST)
- Select **Enable DAST** to configure DAST for the current project.
- Select **Manage scans** to manage the saved DAST scans, site profiles, and scanner profiles.
- For more details, read [DAST on-demand scans](../dast/index.md#on-demand-scans).
+ For more details, read [DAST on-demand scans](../dast/proxy-based.md#on-demand-scans).
- [Dependency Scanning](../dependency_scanning/index.md)
- Select **Configure with a merge request** to create a merge request with the changes required to
enable Dependency Scanning. For more details, see [Enable Dependency Scanning via an automatic merge request](../dependency_scanning/index.md#enable-dependency-scanning-via-an-automatic-merge-request).
diff --git a/doc/user/application_security/dast/browser_based.md b/doc/user/application_security/dast/browser_based.md
index 5a4acc78728..c0a97c0ff92 100644
--- a/doc/user/application_security/dast/browser_based.md
+++ b/doc/user/application_security/dast/browser_based.md
@@ -36,8 +36,8 @@ current DAST scanner is much more effective at finding and testing every page in
To enable the browser-based analyzer:
1. Ensure the DAST [prerequisites](index.md#prerequisites) are met.
-1. Include the [DAST CI/CD template](index.md#include-the-dast-template).
-1. Set the target website using the [`DAST_WEBSITE` CI/CD variable](index.md#available-cicd-variables).
+1. Include the [DAST CI/CD template](proxy-based.md#include-the-dast-template).
+1. Set the target website using the [`DAST_WEBSITE` CI/CD variable](proxy-based.md#available-cicd-variables).
1. Set the CI/CD variable `DAST_BROWSER_SCAN` to `true`.
Example extract of `.gitlab-ci.yml` file:
@@ -79,7 +79,7 @@ The browser-based crawler can be configured using CI/CD variables.
| `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`,
+The [DAST variables](proxy-based.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`,
`DAST_AUTH_URL`, `DAST_USERNAME`, `DAST_PASSWORD`, `DAST_USERNAME_FIELD`, `DAST_PASSWORD_FIELD`, `DAST_FIRST_SUBMIT_FIELD`, `DAST_SUBMIT_FIELD`, `DAST_EXCLUDE_URLS`, `DAST_AUTH_VERIFICATION_URL`, `DAST_BROWSER_AUTH_VERIFICATION_SELECTOR`, `DAST_BROWSER_AUTH_VERIFICATION_LOGIN_FORM`, `DAST_BROWSER_AUTH_REPORT`,
`DAST_INCLUDE_ALPHA_VULNERABILITIES`, `DAST_PATHS_FILE`, `DAST_PATHS`, `DAST_ZAP_CLI_OPTIONS`, and `DAST_ZAP_LOG_CONFIGURATION` are also compatible with browser-based crawler scans.
diff --git a/doc/user/application_security/dast/dast_troubleshooting.md b/doc/user/application_security/dast/dast_troubleshooting.md
index 194761797de..61a7520bf7c 100644
--- a/doc/user/application_security/dast/dast_troubleshooting.md
+++ b/doc/user/application_security/dast/dast_troubleshooting.md
@@ -20,7 +20,7 @@ A DAST job has two executing processes:
Enable the `DAST_DEBUG` CI/CD variable to debug scripts. This can help when troubleshooting the job,
and outputs statements indicating what percentage of the scan is complete.
-For details on using variables, see [Overriding the DAST template](index.md#customize-dast-settings).
+For details on using variables, see [Overriding the DAST template](proxy-based.md#customize-dast-settings).
Debug mode of the ZAP server can be enabled using the `DAST_ZAP_LOG_CONFIGURATION` variable.
The following table outlines examples of values that can be set and the effect that they have on the output that is logged.
diff --git a/doc/user/application_security/dast/index.md b/doc/user/application_security/dast/index.md
index f21e1312eef..d78a8fca98f 100644
--- a/doc/user/application_security/dast/index.md
+++ b/doc/user/application_security/dast/index.md
@@ -13,16 +13,7 @@ application server or incorrect assumptions about security controls may not be
visible from the source code.
Dynamic Application Security Testing (DAST) examines applications for
-vulnerabilities like these in deployed environments. DAST uses the open source
-tool [OWASP Zed Attack Proxy](https://www.zaproxy.org/) for analysis.
-
-After DAST creates its report, GitLab evaluates it for discovered
-vulnerabilities between the source and target branches. Relevant
-findings are noted in the merge request.
-
-The comparison logic uses only the latest pipeline executed for the target
-branch's base commit. Running the pipeline on other commits has no effect on
-the merge request.
+vulnerabilities like these in deployed environments.
NOTE:
To learn how four of the top six attacks were application-based and how
@@ -30,16 +21,88 @@ to protect your organization, download our
["A Seismic Shift in Application Security"](https://about.gitlab.com/resources/whitepaper-seismic-shift-application-security/)
whitepaper.
-## DAST application analysis
+## GitLab DAST
+
+GitLab provides the following DAST analyzers, one or more of which may be useful depending on the kind of application you're testing.
+
+For scanning websites, use one of:
+
+- The [DAST proxy-based analyzer](proxy-based.md) for scanning traditional applications serving simple HTML. The proxy-based analyzer can be run automatically or on-demand.
+- The [DAST browser-based analyzer](browser_based.md) for scanning applications that make heavy use of JavaScript. This includes single page web applications.
+
+For scanning APIs, use:
+
+- The [DAST API analyzer](../dast_api/index.md) for scanning web APIs. Web API technologies such as GraphQL, REST, and SOAP are supported.
+
+Analyzers follow the architectural patterns described in [Secure your application](../index.md).
+Each analyzer can be configured in the pipeline using a CI template and runs the scan in a Docker container. Scans output a [DAST report artifact](../../../ci/yaml/artifacts_reports.md#artifactsreportsdast)
+which GitLab uses to determine discovered vulnerabilities based on differences between scan results on the source and target branches.
+
+### Getting started
+
+#### Prerequisites
+
+- [GitLab Runner](../../../ci/runners/index.md) available, with the
+ [`docker` executor](https://docs.gitlab.com/runner/executors/docker.html) on Linux/amd64.
+- Target application deployed. For more details, read [Deployment options](#application-deployment-options).
+- `dast` stage added to the CI/CD pipeline definition. This should be added after the deploy step, for example:
+
+ ```yaml
+ stages:
+ - build
+ - test
+ - deploy
+ - dast
+ ```
+
+#### Recommendations
+
+- Take care if your pipeline is configured to deploy to the same web server in each run. Running a DAST scan while a server is being updated will lead to inaccurate and non-deterministic results.
+- Configure runners to use the [always pull policy](https://docs.gitlab.com/runner/executors/docker.html#using-the-always-pull-policy) to run the latest versions of the analyzers.
+- By default, DAST downloads all artifacts defined by previous jobs in the pipeline. If
+ your DAST job does not rely on `environment_url.txt` to define the URL under test or any other files created
+ in previous jobs, we recommend you don't download artifacts. To avoid downloading
+ artifacts, extend the analyzer CI/CD job to specify no dependencies. For example, for the DAST proxy-based analyzer add the following to your `.gitlab-ci.yml` file:
+
+ ```yaml
+ dast:
+ dependencies: []
+ ```
+
+#### Analyzer configuration
+
+Please see [DAST proxy-based analyzer](proxy-based.md), [DAST browser-based analyzer](browser_based.md) or [DAST API analyzer](../dast_api/index.md) for
+analyzer-specific configuration instructions.
+
+### View scan results
-DAST can analyze applications in two ways:
+> [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/36332) in GitLab 13.1.
+
+Detected vulnerabilities are shown in [Merge requests](../index.md#view-security-scan-information-in-merge-requests), the [Pipeline security tab](../index.md#view-security-scan-information-in-the-pipeline-security-tab),
+and the [Vulnerability report](../index.md#view-security-scan-information-in-the-vulnerability-report).
-- Passive scan only (DAST default). DAST executes
- [ZAP's Baseline Scan](https://www.zaproxy.org/docs/docker/baseline-scan/) and doesn't
- actively attack your application.
-- Passive and active scan. DAST can be [configured](#full-scan) to also perform an active scan
- to attack your application and produce a more extensive security report. It can be very
- useful when combined with [Review Apps](../../../ci/review_apps/index.md).
+1. To see all vulnerabilities detected, either:
+ - From your project, select **Security & Compliance**, then **Vulnerability report**.
+ - From your pipeline, click on the **Security** tab.
+ - From the merge request, go to the **Security scanning** widget and click **Full report** tab.
+
+1. Select a DAST vulnerability's description. The following fields are examples of what a DAST analyzer may produce to aid investigation and rectification of the underlying cause. Each analyzer may output different fields.
+
+ | Field | Description |
+ |:------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------|:------------------------------------------------------------------ |
+ | Description | Description of the vulnerability. |
+ | Evidence | Evidence of the data found that verified the vulnerability. Often a snippet of the request or response, this can be used to help verify that the finding is a vulnerability. |
+ | Identifiers | Identifiers of the vulnerability. |
+ | Links | Links to further details of the detected vulnerability. |
+ | Method | HTTP method used to detect the vulnerability. |
+ | Project | Namespace and project in which the vulnerability was detected. |
+ | Request Headers | Headers of the request. |
+ | Response Headers | Headers of the response received from the application. |
+ | Response Status | Response status received from the application. |
+ | Scanner Type | Type of vulnerability report. |
+ | Severity | Severity of the vulnerability. |
+ | Solution | Details of a recommended solution to the vulnerability. |
+ | URL | URL at which the vulnerability was detected. |
NOTE:
A pipeline may consist of multiple jobs, including SAST and DAST scanning. If any job
@@ -48,17 +111,19 @@ example, if the DAST job finishes but the SAST job fails, the security dashboard
results. On failure, the analyzer outputs an
[exit code](../../../development/integrations/secure.md#exit-code).
-## Prerequisites
+#### List URLs scanned
-- [GitLab Runner](../../../ci/runners/index.md) available, with the
-[`docker` executor](https://docs.gitlab.com/runner/executors/docker.html) on Linux/amd64.
-- Target application deployed. For more details, read [Deployment options](#deployment-options).
-- DAST runs in the `dast` stage, which must be added manually to your `.gitlab-ci.yml`.
+When DAST completes scanning, the merge request page states the number of URLs scanned.
+Select **View details** to view the web console output which includes the list of scanned URLs.
+
+![DAST Widget](img/dast_urls_scanned_v12_10.png)
-### Deployment options
+### Application deployment options
+
+DAST requires a deployed application to be available to scan.
Depending on the complexity of the target application, there are a few options as to how to deploy and configure
-the DAST template. We provided a set of example applications with their configurations in our
+the DAST template. A set of example applications have been provided with their configurations in the
[DAST demonstrations](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/security-products/demos/dast/) project.
#### Review Apps
@@ -77,6 +142,8 @@ After your Docker build job completes and your image is added to your container
By using service definitions in your `.gitlab-ci.yml`, you can scan services with the DAST analyzer.
+When adding a `services` section to the job, the `alias` is used to define the hostname that can be used to access the service. In the following example, the `alias: yourapp` portion of the `dast` job definition means that the URL to the deployed application will use `yourapp` as the hostname (`https://yourapp/`).
+
```yaml
stages:
- build
@@ -105,6 +172,7 @@ dast:
alias: yourapp
variables:
+ DAST_WEBSITE: https://yourapp
DAST_FULL_SCAN_ENABLED: "true" # do a full scan
DAST_BROWSER_SCAN: "true" # use the browser-based GitLab DAST crawler
```
@@ -122,1329 +190,3 @@ services: # use services to link the container to the dast job
- name: $CI_REGISTRY_IMAGE:$CI_COMMIT_SHA
alias: yourapp
```
-
-### DAST job order
-
-When using the `DAST.gitlab-ci.yml` template, the `dast` stage is run last as shown in
-the example below. To ensure DAST scans the latest code, deploy your application
-in a stage before the `dast` stage.
-
-```yaml
- stages:
- - build
- - test
- - deploy
- - dast
-```
-
-Take care if your pipeline is configured to deploy to the same web server in each run. Running a
-pipeline while another is still running could result in one pipeline overwriting the code from
-another pipeline. The site to be scanned should be excluded from changes for the duration of a DAST
-scan. The only changes to the site should be from the DAST scanner.
-
-Changes to the site during a scan from any of the following could lead to inaccurate results:
-
-- Users.
-- Scheduled tasks.
-- Database changes.
-- Code changes.
-- Other pipelines.
-- Other scanners.
-
-## DAST run options
-
-You can use DAST to examine your web application:
-
-- Automatically, initiated by a merge request.
-- Manually, initiated on demand.
-
-Some of the differences between these run options:
-
-| Automatic scan | On-demand scan |
-|:-----------------------------------------------------------------|:------------------------------|
-| DAST scan is initiated by a merge request. | DAST scan is initiated manually, outside the DevOps life cycle. |
-| CI/CD variables are sourced from `.gitlab-ci.yml`. | CI/CD variables are provided in the UI. |
-| All [DAST CI/CD variables](#available-cicd-variables) available. | Subset of [DAST CI/CD variables](#available-cicd-variables) available. |
-| `DAST.gitlab-ci.yml` template. | `DAST-On-Demand-Scan.gitlab-ci.yml` template. |
-
-### Enable automatic DAST run
-
-To enable DAST to run automatically, either:
-
-- Enable [Auto DAST](../../../topics/autodevops/stages.md#auto-dast) (provided
- by [Auto DevOps](../../../topics/autodevops/index.md)).
-- [Include the DAST template](#include-the-dast-template) in your existing
- `.gitlab-ci.yml` file.
-- [Configure DAST using the UI](#configure-dast-using-the-ui).
-
-#### Include the DAST template
-
-> - This template was [updated](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/merge_requests/62597) to DAST_VERSION: 2 in GitLab 14.0.
-> - This template was [updated](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/merge_requests/87183) to DAST_VERSION: 3 in GitLab 15.0.
-
-If you want to manually add DAST to your application, the DAST job is defined
-in a CI/CD template file. Updates to the template are provided with GitLab
-upgrades, allowing you to benefit from any improvements and additions.
-
-To include the DAST template:
-
-1. Select the CI/CD template you want to use:
-
- - [`DAST.gitlab-ci.yml`](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/blob/master/lib/gitlab/ci/templates/Security/DAST.gitlab-ci.yml):
- Stable version of the DAST CI/CD template.
- - [`DAST.latest.gitlab-ci.yml`](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/blob/master/lib/gitlab/ci/templates/Security/DAST.latest.gitlab-ci.yml):
- Latest version of the DAST template. ([Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/254325)
- in GitLab 13.8).
-
- WARNING:
- The latest version of the template may include breaking changes. Use the
- stable template unless you need a feature provided only in the latest template.
-
- For more information about template versioning, see the
- [CI/CD documentation](../../../development/cicd/templates.md#latest-version).
-
-1. Add a `dast` stage to your GitLab CI stages configuration:
-
- ```yaml
- stages:
- - dast
- ```
-
-1. Add the template to GitLab, based on your version of GitLab:
-
- - In GitLab 11.9 and later, [include](../../../ci/yaml/index.md#includetemplate)
- the template by adding the following to your `.gitlab-ci.yml` file:
-
- ```yaml
- include:
- - template: <template_file.yml>
-
- variables:
- DAST_WEBSITE: https://example.com
- ```
-
- - In GitLab 11.8 and earlier, add the contents of the template to your
- `.gitlab_ci.yml` file.
-
-1. Define the URL to be scanned by DAST by using one of these methods:
-
- - Set the `DAST_WEBSITE` [CI/CD variable](../../../ci/yaml/index.md#variables).
- If set, this value takes precedence.
-
- - Add the URL in an `environment_url.txt` file at the root of your project. This is
- useful for testing in dynamic environments. To run DAST against an application
- dynamically created during a GitLab CI/CD pipeline, a job that runs prior to
- the DAST scan must persist the application's domain in an `environment_url.txt`
- file. DAST automatically parses the `environment_url.txt` file to find its
- scan target.
-
- For example, in a job that runs prior to DAST, you could include code that
- looks similar to:
-
- ```yaml
- script:
- - echo http://${CI_PROJECT_ID}-${CI_ENVIRONMENT_SLUG}.domain.com > environment_url.txt
- artifacts:
- paths: [environment_url.txt]
- when: always
- ```
-
- You can see an example of this in our
- [Auto DevOps CI YAML](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/blob/master/lib/gitlab/ci/templates/Jobs/Deploy.gitlab-ci.yml)
- file.
-
-The included template creates a `dast` job in your CI/CD pipeline and scans
-your project's running application for possible vulnerabilities.
-
-The results are saved as a
-[DAST report artifact](../../../ci/yaml/artifacts_reports.md#artifactsreportsdast)
-that you can later download and analyze. Due to implementation limitations, we
-always take the latest DAST artifact available. Behind the scenes, the
-[GitLab DAST Docker image](https://gitlab.com/security-products/dast)
-is used to run the tests on the specified URL and scan it for possible
-vulnerabilities.
-
-By default, the DAST template uses the latest major version of the DAST Docker
-image. Using the `DAST_VERSION` variable, you can choose how DAST updates:
-
-- Automatically update DAST with new features and fixes by pinning to a major
- version (such as `1`).
-- Only update fixes by pinning to a minor version (such as `1.6`).
-- Prevent all updates by pinning to a specific version (such as `1.6.4`).
-
-Find the latest DAST versions on the [Releases](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/security-products/dast/-/releases)
-page.
-
-#### Configure DAST using the UI
-
-You can enable or configure DAST settings using the UI. The generated settings are formatted so they
-can be conveniently pasted into the `.gitlab-ci.yml` file.
-
-1. On the top bar, select **Main menu > Projects** and find your project.
-1. On the left sidebar, select **Security & Compliance > Configuration**.
-1. In the **Dynamic Application Security Testing (DAST)** section, select **Enable DAST** or
- **Configure DAST**.
-1. Select the desired **Scanner profile**, or select **Create scanner profile** and save a
- scanner profile. For more details, see [scanner profiles](#scanner-profile).
-1. Select the desired **Site profile**, or select **Create site profile** and save a site
- profile. For more details, see [site profiles](#site-profile).
-1. Select **Generate code snippet**. A modal opens with the YAML snippet corresponding to the
- options you selected.
-1. Do one of the following:
- 1. To copy the snippet to your clipboard, select **Copy code only**.
- 1. To add the snippet to your project's `.gitlab-ci.yml` file, select
- **Copy code and open `.gitlab-ci.yml` file**. The Pipeline Editor opens.
- 1. Paste the snippet into the `.gitlab-ci.yml` file.
- 1. Select the **Lint** tab to confirm the edited `.gitlab-ci.yml` file is valid.
- 1. Select the **Edit** tab, then select **Commit changes**.
-
-When the snippet is committed to the `.gitlab-ci.yml` file, pipelines include a DAST job.
-
-#### Crawling web applications dependent on JavaScript
-
-GitLab has released a new browser-based crawler, an add-on to DAST that uses a browser to crawl web applications for content. This crawler replaces the standard DAST Spider and Ajax Crawler, and uses the same authentication mechanisms as a normal DAST scan.
-
-The browser-based crawler crawls websites by browsing web pages as a user would. This approach works well with web applications that make heavy use of JavaScript, such as Single Page Applications.
-
-For more details, including setup instructions, see [DAST browser-based crawler](browser_based.md).
-
-### Full scan
-
-DAST can be configured to perform [ZAP Full Scan](https://www.zaproxy.org/docs/docker/full-scan/), which
-includes both passive and active scanning against the same target website:
-
-```yaml
-include:
- - template: DAST.gitlab-ci.yml
-
-variables:
- DAST_FULL_SCAN_ENABLED: "true"
- DAST_BROWSER_SCAN: "true" # use the browser-based GitLab DAST crawler
-```
-
-If your DAST job exceeds the job timeout and you need to reduce the scan duration, we shared some
-tips for optimizing DAST scans in a [blog post](https://about.gitlab.com/blog/2020/08/31/how-to-configure-dast-full-scans-for-complex-web-applications/).
-
-### API scan
-
-> - [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/10928) in GitLab 12.10.
-> - A new DAST API scanning engine was introduced in GitLab 13.10.
-
-Using an API specification as a scan's target is a useful way to seed URLs for scanning an API.
-Vulnerability rules in an API scan are different than those in a normal website scan.
-
-A new DAST API scanning engine is available in GitLab 13.12 and later. For more details, see [DAST API scanning engine](../dast_api). The new scanning engine supports REST, SOAP, GraphQL, and generic APIs using forms, XML, and JSON. Testing can be performed using OpenAPI, Postman Collections, and HTTP Archive (HAR) documents.
-
-The target API instance's base URL is provided by using the `DAST_API_TARGET_URL` variable or an `environment_url.txt` file.
-
-#### Specification format
-
-API scans support OpenAPI V2 and OpenAPI V3 specifications. You can define these specifications using `JSON` or `YAML`.
-
-#### Import API specification from a URL
-
-If your API specification is accessible at a URL, you can pass that URL in directly as the target.
-The specification does not have to be hosted on the same host as the API being tested.
-
-```yaml
-include:
- - template: DAST-API.gitlab-ci.yml
-
-variables:
- DAST_API_SPECIFICATION: http://my.api/api-specification.yml
-```
-
-#### Import API specification from a file
-
-If your API specification file is in your repository, you can provide its filename as the target.
-
-```yaml
-dast:
- variables:
- GIT_STRATEGY: fetch
- DAST_API_SPECIFICATION: api-specification.yml
-```
-
-#### Full API scan
-
-API scans support full scanning, which can be enabled by using the `DAST_FULL_SCAN_ENABLED`
-CI/CD variable. Domain validation is not supported for full API scans.
-
-#### Host override
-
-Specifications often define a host, which contains a domain name and a port. The
-host referenced may be different than the host of the API's review instance.
-This can cause incorrect URLs to be imported, or a scan on an incorrect host.
-Use the `DAST_API_HOST_OVERRIDE` CI/CD variable to override these values.
-
-WARNING:
-When using the API host override feature, you cannot use the `$DAST_WEBSITE` variable to override the hostname.
-A host override is _only_ supported when importing the API specification from a URL. Attempts to override the
-host throw an error when the API specification is imported from a file. This is due to a limitation in the
-ZAP OpenAPI extension.
-
-For example, with a OpenAPI V3 specification containing:
-
-```yaml
-servers:
- - url: https://api.host.com
-```
-
-If the test version of the API is running at `https://api-test.host.com`, then
-the following DAST configuration can be used:
-
-```yaml
-include:
- - template: DAST-API.gitlab-ci.yml
-
-variables:
- DAST_API_SPECIFICATION: http://api-test.host.com/api-specification.yml
- DAST_API_HOST_OVERRIDE: api-test.host.com
-```
-
-#### Authentication using headers
-
-Tokens in request headers are often used as a way to authenticate API requests.
-You can achieve this by using the `DAST_REQUEST_HEADERS` CI/CD variable.
-Headers are applied to every request DAST makes.
-
-```yaml
-include:
- - template: DAST-API.gitlab-ci.yml
-
-variables:
- DAST_API_SPECIFICATION: http://api-test.api.com/api-specification.yml
- DAST_REQUEST_HEADERS: "Authorization: Bearer my.token"
-```
-
-### URL scan
-
-> - [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/214120) in GitLab 13.4.
-> - [Improved](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/273141) in GitLab 13.11.
-
-A URL scan allows you to specify which parts of a website are scanned by DAST.
-
-#### Define the URLs to scan
-
-URLs to scan can be specified by either of the following methods:
-
-- Use `DAST_PATHS_FILE` CI/CD variable to specify the name of a file containing the paths.
-- Use `DAST_PATHS` variable to list the paths.
-
-##### Use `DAST_PATHS_FILE` CI/CD variable
-
-> [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/258825) in GitLab 13.6.
-
-To define the URLs to scan in a file, create a plain text file with one path per line.
-
-```plaintext
-page1.html
-/page2.html
-category/shoes/page1.html
-```
-
-To scan the URLs in that file, set the CI/CD variable `DAST_PATHS_FILE` to the path of that file.
-The file can be checked into the project repository or generated as an artifact by a job that
-runs before DAST.
-
-By default, DAST scans do not clone the project repository. Instruct the DAST job to clone
-the project by setting `GIT_STRATEGY` to fetch. Give a file path relative to `CI_PROJECT_DIR` to `DAST_PATHS_FILE`.
-
-```yaml
-include:
- - template: DAST.gitlab-ci.yml
-
-variables:
- GIT_STRATEGY: fetch
- DAST_PATHS_FILE: url_file.txt # url_file.txt lives in the root directory of the project
- DAST_BROWSER_SCAN: "true" # use the browser-based GitLab DAST crawler
-```
-
-##### Use `DAST_PATHS` CI/CD variable
-
-> [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/214120) in GitLab 13.4.
-
-To specify the paths to scan in a CI/CD variable, add a comma-separated list of the paths to the `DAST_PATHS`
-variable. Note that you can only scan paths of a single host.
-
-```yaml
-include:
- - template: DAST.gitlab-ci.yml
-
-variables:
- DAST_PATHS: "/page1.html,/category1/page1.html,/page3.html"
- DAST_BROWSER_SCAN: "true" # use the browser-based GitLab DAST crawler
-```
-
-When using `DAST_PATHS` and `DAST_PATHS_FILE`, note the following:
-
-- `DAST_WEBSITE` must be defined when using either `DAST_PATHS_FILE` or `DAST_PATHS`. The paths listed in either use `DAST_WEBSITE` to build the URLs to scan
-- Spidering is disabled when `DAST_PATHS` or `DAST_PATHS_FILE` are defined
-- `DAST_PATHS_FILE` and `DAST_PATHS` cannot be used together
-- The `DAST_PATHS` variable has a limit of about 130kb. If you have a list or paths
- greater than this, use `DAST_PATHS_FILE`.
-
-#### Full Scan
-
-To perform a [full scan](#full-scan) on the listed paths, use the `DAST_FULL_SCAN_ENABLED` CI/CD variable.
-
-### List URLs scanned
-
-When DAST completes scanning, the merge request page states the number of URLs scanned.
-Select **View details** to view the web console output which includes the list of scanned URLs.
-
-![DAST Widget](img/dast_urls_scanned_v12_10.png)
-
-### View details of a vulnerability detected by DAST
-
-> [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/36332) in GitLab 13.1.
-
-Vulnerabilities detected by DAST occur in the live web application. Addressing these types of
-vulnerabilities requires specific information. DAST provides the information required to
-investigate and rectify the underlying cause.
-
-To view details of vulnerabilities detected by DAST:
-
-1. To see all vulnerabilities detected, either:
- - Go to your project and select **Security & Compliance**.
- - Go to the merge request and select the **Security** tab.
-
-1. Select a vulnerability's description. The following details are provided:
-
- | Field | Description |
- |:-----------------|:------------------------------------------------------------------ |
- | Description | Description of the vulnerability. |
- | Project | Namespace and project in which the vulnerability was detected. |
- | Method | HTTP method used to detect the vulnerability. |
- | URL | URL at which the vulnerability was detected. |
- | Request Headers | Headers of the request. |
- | Response Status | Response status received from the application. |
- | Response Headers | Headers of the response received from the application. |
- | Evidence | Evidence of the data found that verified the vulnerability. Often a snippet of the request or response, this can be used to help verify that the finding is a vulnerability. |
- | Identifiers | Identifiers of the vulnerability. |
- | Severity | Severity of the vulnerability. |
- | Scanner Type | Type of vulnerability report. |
- | Links | Links to further details of the detected vulnerability. |
- | Solution | Details of a recommended solution to the vulnerability (optional). |
-
-## Customize DAST settings
-
-You can customize the behavior of DAST using both CI/CD variables and command-line options. Use of CI/CD
-variables overrides the values contained in the DAST template.
-
-### Customize DAST using CI/CD variables
-
-WARNING:
-Beginning in GitLab 13.0, the use of [`only` and `except`](../../../ci/yaml/index.md#only--except)
-is no longer supported. You must use [`rules`](../../../ci/yaml/index.md#rules) instead.
-
-The DAST settings can be changed through CI/CD variables by using the
-[`variables`](../../../ci/yaml/index.md#variables) parameter in `.gitlab-ci.yml`. For details of
-all DAST CI/CD variables, read [Available CI/CD variables](#available-cicd-variables).
-
-For example:
-
-```yaml
-include:
- - template: DAST.gitlab-ci.yml
-
-variables:
- DAST_WEBSITE: https://example.com
- DAST_SPIDER_MINS: 120
- DAST_BROWSER_SCAN: "true" # use the browser-based GitLab DAST crawler
-```
-
-Because the template is [evaluated before](../../../ci/yaml/index.md#include) the pipeline
-configuration, the last mention of the variable takes precedence.
-
-#### Enable or disable rules
-
-A complete list of the rules that DAST uses to scan for vulnerabilities can be
-found in the [ZAP documentation](https://www.zaproxy.org/docs/alerts/).
-
-`DAST_EXCLUDE_RULES` disables the rules with the given IDs.
-
-`DAST_ONLY_INCLUDE_RULES` restricts the set of rules used in the scan to
-those with the given IDs.
-
-`DAST_EXCLUDE_RULES` and `DAST_ONLY_INCLUDE_RULES` are mutually exclusive and a
-DAST scan with both configured exits with an error.
-
-By default, several rules are disabled because they either take a long time to
-run or frequently generate false positives. The complete list of disabled rules
-can be found in [`exclude_rules.yml`](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/security-products/dast/-/blob/main/src/config/exclude_rules.yml).
-
-The lists for `DAST_EXCLUDE_RULES` and `DAST_ONLY_INCLUDE_RULES` **must** be enclosed in double
-quotes (`"`), otherwise they are interpreted as numeric values.
-
-#### Hide sensitive information
-
-> [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/36332) in GitLab 13.1.
-
-HTTP request and response headers may contain sensitive information, including cookies and
-authorization credentials. By default, the following headers are masked:
-
-- `Authorization`.
-- `Proxy-Authorization`.
-- `Set-Cookie` (values only).
-- `Cookie` (values only).
-
-Using the [`DAST_MASK_HTTP_HEADERS` CI/CD variable](#available-cicd-variables), you can list the
-headers whose values you want masked. For details on how to mask headers, see
-[Customizing the DAST settings](#customize-dast-settings).
-
-#### Use Mutual TLS
-
-> [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/299596) in GitLab 14.8.
-
-Mutual TLS allows a target application server to verify that requests are from a known source. Browser-based scans do not support Mutual TLS.
-
-**Requirements**
-
-- Base64-encoded PKCS12 certificate
-- Password of the base64-encoded PKCS12 certificate
-
-To enable Mutual TLS:
-
-1. If the PKCS12 certificate is not already base64-encoded, convert it to base64 encoding. For security reasons, we recommend encoding the certificate locally, **not** using a web-hosted conversion service. For example, to encode the certificate on either macOS or Linux:
-
- ```shell
- base64 <path-to-pkcs12-certificate-file>
- ```
-
-1. Create a [masked variable](../../../ci/variables/index.md) named `DAST_PKCS12_CERTIFICATE_BASE64` and store the base64-encoded PKCS12 certificate's value in that variable.
-1. Create a masked variable `DAST_PKCS12_PASSWORD` and store the PKCS12 certificate's password in that variable.
-
-#### Available CI/CD variables
-
-These CI/CD variables are specific to DAST. They can be used to customize the behavior of DAST to your requirements.
-
-WARNING:
-All customization of GitLab security scanning tools should be tested in a merge request before
-merging these changes to the default branch. Failure to do so can give unexpected results,
-including a large number of false positives.
-
-| CI/CD variable | Type | Description |
-|:-------------------------------------------------|:--------------|:------------------------------|
-| `DAST_ADVERTISE_SCAN` | boolean | Set to `true` to add a `Via` header to every request sent, advertising that the request was sent as part of a GitLab DAST scan. [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/334947) in GitLab 14.1. |
-| `DAST_AGGREGATE_VULNERABILITIES` | boolean | Vulnerability aggregation is set to `true` by default. To disable this feature and see each vulnerability individually set to `false`. [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/254043) in GitLab 14.0. |
-| `DAST_API_HOST_OVERRIDE` <sup>1</sup> | string | Used to override domains defined in API specification files. Only supported when importing the API specification from a URL. Example: `example.com:8080`. |
-| `DAST_API_SPECIFICATION` <sup>1</sup> | URL or string | The API specification to import. The specification can be hosted at a URL, or the name of a file present in the `/zap/wrk` directory. The variable `DAST_WEBSITE` must be specified if this is omitted. |
-| `DAST_AUTH_REPORT` <sup>2</sup> | boolean | Used in combination with exporting the `gl-dast-debug-auth-report.html` artifact to aid in debugging authentication issues. |
-| `DAST_AUTH_EXCLUDE_URLS` <sup>2</sup> | URLs | **{warning}** **[Removed](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/289959)** in GitLab 14.0. Replaced by `DAST_EXCLUDE_URLS`. The URLs to skip during the authenticated scan; comma-separated. Regular expression syntax can be used to match multiple URLs. For example, `.*` matches an arbitrary character sequence. Not supported for API scans. |
-| `DAST_AUTH_URL` <sup>1,2</sup> | URL | The URL of the page containing the sign-in HTML form on the target website. `DAST_USERNAME` and `DAST_PASSWORD` are submitted with the login form to create an authenticated scan. Not supported for API scans. Example: `https://login.example.com`. |
-| `DAST_AUTH_VERIFICATION_LOGIN_FORM` <sup>2</sup> | boolean | Verifies successful authentication by checking for the lack of a login form once the login form has been submitted. |
-| `DAST_AUTH_VERIFICATION_SELECTOR` <sup>2</sup> | selector | Verifies successful authentication by checking for presence of a selector once the login form has been submitted. Example: `css:.user-photo`. |
-| `DAST_AUTH_VERIFICATION_URL` <sup>1,2</sup> | URL | A URL only accessible to logged in users that DAST can use to confirm successful authentication. If provided, DAST exits if it cannot access the URL. Example: `"http://example.com/loggedin_page"`. [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/207335) in GitLab 13.8. |
-| `DAST_AUTO_UPDATE_ADDONS` | boolean | ZAP add-ons are pinned to specific versions in the DAST Docker image. Set to `true` to download the latest versions when the scan starts. Default: `false`. |
-| `DAST_BROWSER_PATH_TO_LOGIN_FORM` <sup>1,2</sup> | selector | Comma-separated list of selectors that are selected prior to attempting to enter `DAST_USERNAME` and `DAST_PASSWORD` into the login form. Example: `"css:.navigation-menu,css:.login-menu-item"`. [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/326633) in GitLab 14.1. |
-| `DAST_DEBUG` <sup>1</sup> | boolean | Enable debug message output. Default: `false`. [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/12652) in GitLab 13.1. |
-| `DAST_EXCLUDE_RULES` | string | Set to a comma-separated list of Vulnerability Rule IDs to exclude them from running during the scan. Rule IDs are numbers and can be found from the DAST log or on the [ZAP project](https://www.zaproxy.org/docs/alerts/). For example, `HTTP Parameter Override` has a rule ID of `10026`. Cannot be used when `DAST_ONLY_INCLUDE_RULES` is set. **Note:** In earlier versions of GitLab the excluded rules were executed but vulnerabilities they generated were suppressed. [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/118641) in GitLab 12.10. |
-| `DAST_EXCLUDE_URLS` <sup>1,2</sup> | URLs | The URLs to skip during the authenticated scan; comma-separated. Regular expression syntax can be used to match multiple URLs. For example, `.*` matches an arbitrary character sequence. Not supported for API scans. Example, `http://example.com/sign-out`. |
-| `DAST_FIRST_SUBMIT_FIELD` <sup>2</sup> | string | The `id` or `name` of the element that when selected submits the username form of a multi-page login process. For example, `css:button[type='user-submit']`. [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-ee/issues/9894) in GitLab 12.4. |
-| `DAST_FULL_SCAN_DOMAIN_VALIDATION_REQUIRED` | boolean | **{warning}** **[Removed](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/293595)** in GitLab 14.0. Set to `true` to require domain validation when running DAST full scans. Not supported for API scans. Default: `false` |
-| `DAST_FULL_SCAN_ENABLED` <sup>1</sup> | boolean | Set to `true` to run a [ZAP Full Scan](https://github.com/zaproxy/zaproxy/wiki/ZAP-Full-Scan) instead of a [ZAP Baseline Scan](https://github.com/zaproxy/zaproxy/wiki/ZAP-Baseline-Scan). Default: `false` |
-| `DAST_HTML_REPORT` | string | The filename of the HTML report written at the end of a scan. [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/12652) in GitLab 13.1. |
-| `DAST_INCLUDE_ALPHA_VULNERABILITIES` | boolean | Set to `true` to include alpha passive and active scan rules. Default: `false`. [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/12652) in GitLab 13.1. |
-| `DAST_MARKDOWN_REPORT` | string | The filename of the Markdown report written at the end of a scan. [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/12652) in GitLab 13.1. |
-| `DAST_MASK_HTTP_HEADERS` | string | Comma-separated list of request and response headers to be masked (GitLab 13.1). Must contain **all** headers to be masked. Refer to [list of headers that are masked by default](#hide-sensitive-information). |
-| `DAST_MAX_URLS_PER_VULNERABILITY` | number | The maximum number of URLs reported for a single vulnerability. `DAST_MAX_URLS_PER_VULNERABILITY` is set to `50` by default. To list all the URLs set to `0`. [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/security-products/dast/-/merge_requests/433) in GitLab 13.12. |
-| `DAST_ONLY_INCLUDE_RULES` | string | Set to a comma-separated list of Vulnerability Rule IDs to configure the scan to run only them. Rule IDs are numbers and can be found from the DAST log or on the [ZAP project](https://www.zaproxy.org/docs/alerts/). Cannot be used when `DAST_EXCLUDE_RULES` is set. [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/250651) in GitLab 13.12. |
-| `DAST_PASSWORD` <sup>1,2</sup> | string | The password to authenticate to in the website. Example: `P@55w0rd!` |
-| `DAST_PASSWORD_FIELD` <sup>1,2</sup> | string | The selector of password field at the sign-in HTML form. Example: `id:password` |
-| `DAST_PATHS` | string | Set to a comma-separated list of URLs for DAST to scan. For example, `/page1.html,/category1/page3.html,/page2.html`. [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/214120) in GitLab 13.4. |
-| `DAST_PATHS_FILE` | string | The file path containing the paths within `DAST_WEBSITE` to scan. The file must be plain text with one path per line. [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/258825) in GitLab 13.6. |
-| `DAST_PKCS12_CERTIFICATE_BASE64` | string | The PKCS12 certificate used for sites that require Mutual TLS. Must be encoded as base64 text. |
-| `DAST_PKCS12_PASSWORD` | string | The password of the certificate used in `DAST_PKCS12_CERTIFICATE_BASE64`. |
-| `DAST_REQUEST_HEADERS` <sup>1</sup> | string | Set to a comma-separated list of request header names and values. Headers are added to every request made by DAST. For example, `Cache-control: no-cache,User-Agent: DAST/1.0` |
-| `DAST_SKIP_TARGET_CHECK` | boolean | Set to `true` to prevent DAST from checking that the target is available before scanning. Default: `false`. [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/229067) in GitLab 13.8. |
-| `DAST_SPIDER_MINS` <sup>1</sup> | number | The maximum duration of the spider scan in minutes. Set to `0` for unlimited. Default: One minute, or unlimited when the scan is a full scan. [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/12652) in GitLab 13.1. |
-| `DAST_SPIDER_START_AT_HOST` | boolean | Set to `false` to prevent DAST from resetting the target to its host before scanning. When `true`, non-host targets `http://test.site/some_path` is reset to `http://test.site` before scan. Default: `true`. [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/258805) in GitLab 13.6. |
-| `DAST_SUBMIT_FIELD` <sup>2</sup> | string | The `id` or `name` of the element that when selected submits the login form or the password form of a multi-page login process. For example, `css:button[type='submit']`. [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-ee/issues/9894) in GitLab 12.4. |
-| `DAST_TARGET_AVAILABILITY_TIMEOUT` <sup>1</sup> | number | Time limit in seconds to wait for target availability. |
-| `DAST_USE_AJAX_SPIDER` <sup>1</sup> | boolean | Set to `true` to use the AJAX spider in addition to the traditional spider, useful for crawling sites that require JavaScript. Default: `false`. [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/12652) in GitLab 13.1. |
-| `DAST_USERNAME` <sup>1,2</sup> | string | The username to authenticate to in the website. Example: `admin` |
-| `DAST_USERNAME_FIELD` <sup>1,2</sup> | string | The selector of username field at the sign-in HTML form. Example: `name:username` |
-| `DAST_XML_REPORT` | string | The filename of the XML report written at the end of a scan. [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/12652) in GitLab 13.1. |
-| `DAST_WEBSITE` <sup>1</sup> | URL | The URL of the website to scan. The variable `DAST_API_SPECIFICATION` must be specified if this is omitted. |
-| `DAST_ZAP_CLI_OPTIONS` | string | ZAP server command-line options. For example, `-Xmx3072m` would set the Java maximum memory allocation pool size. [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/12652) in GitLab 13.1. |
-| `DAST_ZAP_LOG_CONFIGURATION` | string | Set to a semicolon-separated list of additional log4j properties for the ZAP Server. Example: `logger.httpsender.name=org.parosproxy.paros.network.HttpSender;logger.httpsender.level=debug;logger.sitemap.name=org.parosproxy.paros.model.SiteMap;logger.sitemap.level=debug;` |
-| `SECURE_ANALYZERS_PREFIX` | URL | Set the Docker registry base address from which to download the analyzer. |
-
-1. Available to an on-demand DAST scan.
-1. Used for authentication.
-
-### Customize DAST using command-line options
-
-Not all DAST configuration is available via CI/CD variables. To find out all
-possible options, run the following configuration.
-Available command-line options are printed to the job log:
-
-```yaml
-include:
- template: DAST.gitlab-ci.yml
-
-dast:
- script:
- - /analyze --help
-```
-
-You must then overwrite the `script` command to pass in the appropriate
-argument. For example, vulnerability definitions in alpha can be included with
-`-a`. The following configuration includes those definitions:
-
-```yaml
-include:
- template: DAST.gitlab-ci.yml
-
-dast:
- script:
- - export DAST_WEBSITE=${DAST_WEBSITE:-$(cat environment_url.txt)}
- - /analyze -a -t $DAST_WEBSITE
-```
-
-### Custom ZAProxy configuration
-
-The ZAProxy server contains many [useful configurable values](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/36437#note_245801885).
-Many key/values for `-config` remain undocumented, but there is an untested list of
-[possible keys](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/36437#note_244981023).
-Note that these options are not supported by DAST, and may break the DAST scan
-when used. An example of how to rewrite the Authorization header value with `TOKEN` follows:
-
-```yaml
-include:
- template: DAST.gitlab-ci.yml
-
-variables:
- DAST_ZAP_CLI_OPTIONS: "-config replacer.full_list(0).description=auth -config replacer.full_list(0).enabled=true -config replacer.full_list(0).matchtype=REQ_HEADER -config replacer.full_list(0).matchstr=Authorization -config replacer.full_list(0).regex=false -config replacer.full_list(0).replacement=TOKEN"
-```
-
-## Authentication
-
-NOTE:
-We highly recommend you configure the scanner to authenticate to the application. If you don't, it cannot check most of the application for security risks, as most
-of your application is likely not accessible without authentication. We also recommend
-you periodically confirm the scanner's authentication is still working, as this tends to break over
-time due to authentication changes to the application.
-
-Create masked CI/CD variables to pass the credentials that DAST uses.
-To create masked variables for the username and password, see [Create a custom variable in the UI](../../../ci/variables/index.md#custom-cicd-variables).
-The key of the username variable must be `DAST_USERNAME`,
-and the key of the password variable must be `DAST_PASSWORD`.
-
-After DAST has authenticated with the application, all cookies are collected from the web browser.
-For each cookie a matching session token is created for use by ZAP. This ensures ZAP is recognized
-by the application as correctly authenticated.
-
-Authentication supports single form logins, multi-step login forms, and authenticating to URLs outside of the configured target URL.
-
-WARNING:
-**Never** run an authenticated scan against a production server. When an authenticated
-scan is run, it may perform *any* function that the authenticated user can. This
-includes actions like modifying and deleting data, submitting forms, and following links.
-Only run an authenticated scan against a test server.
-
-### SSO
-
-DAST can authenticate to websites making use of SSO, with the following restrictions:
-
-- DAST cannot bypass a CAPTCHA if the authentication flow includes one.
-- DAST cannot handle multi-factor authentication like one-time passwords (OTP) by using SMS or authenticator apps.
-- DAST must get a cookie, or a local or session storage, with a sufficiently random value.
-
-The [authentication debug output](index.md#configure-the-authentication-debug-output) can be helpful for troubleshooting SSO authentication
-with DAST.
-
-### Log in using automatic detection of the login form
-
-By providing a `DAST_USERNAME`, `DAST_PASSWORD`, and `DAST_AUTH_URL`, DAST attempts to authenticate to the
-target application by locating the login form based on a determination about whether or not the form contains username or password fields.
-
-Automatic detection is "best-effort", and depending on the application being scanned may provide either a resilient login experience or one that fails to authenticate the user.
-
-Login process:
-
-1. The `DAST_AUTH_URL` is loaded into the browser, and any forms on the page are located.
- 1. If a form contains a username and password field, `DAST_USERNAME` and `DAST_PASSWORD` is inputted into the respective fields, the form submit button is selected and the user is logged in.
- 1. If a form contains only a username field, it is assumed that the login form is multi-step.
- 1. The `DAST_USERNAME` is inputted into the username field and the form submit button is selected.
- 1. The subsequent pages loads where it is expected that a form exists and contains a password field. If found, `DAST_PASSWORD` is inputted, form submit button is selected and the user is logged in.
-
-### Log in using explicit selection of the login form
-
-By providing a `DAST_USERNAME_FIELD`, `DAST_PASSWORD_FIELD`, and `DAST_SUBMIT_FIELD`, in addition to the fields required for automatic login,
-DAST attempts to authenticate to the target application by locating the login form based on the selectors provided.
-Most applications benefit from this approach to authentication.
-
-Login process:
-
-1. The `DAST_AUTH_URL` is loaded into the browser, and any forms on the page are located.
- 1. If the `DAST_FIRST_SUBMIT_FIELD` is not defined, then `DAST_USERNAME` is inputted into `DAST_USERNAME_FIELD`, `DAST_PASSWORD` is inputted into `DAST_PASSWORD_FIELD`, `DAST_SUBMIT_FIELD` is selected and the user is logged in.
- 1. If the `DAST_FIRST_SUBMIT_FIELD` is defined, then it is assumed that the login form is multi-step.
- 1. The `DAST_USERNAME` is inputted into the `DAST_USERNAME_FIELD` field and the `DAST_FIRST_SUBMIT_FIELD` is selected.
- 1. The subsequent pages loads where the `DAST_PASSWORD` is inputted into the `DAST_PASSWORD_FIELD` field, the `DAST_SUBMIT_FIELD` is selected and the user is logged in.
-
-### Verifying successful login
-
-Once the login form has been submitted, DAST determines if the login was successful. Unsuccessful attempts at authentication cause the scan to halt.
-
-Following the submission of the login form, authentication is determined to be unsuccessful when:
-
-- A `400` or `500` series HTTP response status code is returned.
-- A new cookie/browser storage value determined to be sufficiently random has not been set.
-
-In addition to these checks, the user can configure their own verification checks.
-Each of the following checks can be used in conjunction with one another, if none are configured by default the presence of a login form is checked.
-
-#### Verifying based on the URL
-
-When `DAST_AUTH_VERIFICATION_URL` is configured, the URL displayed in the browser tab post login form submission is directly compared to the URL in the CI/CD variable.
-If these are not exactly the same, authentication is deemed to be unsuccessful.
-
-For example:
-
-```yaml
-include:
- - template: DAST.gitlab-ci.yml
-
-dast:
- variables:
- DAST_WEBSITE: "https://example.com"
- DAST_BROWSER_SCAN: "true" # use the browser-based GitLab DAST crawler
- ...
- DAST_AUTH_VERIFICATION_URL: "https://example.com/user/welcome"
-```
-
-#### Verify based on presence of an element
-
-When `DAST_AUTH_VERIFICATION_SELECTOR` is configured, the page displayed in the browser tab is searched for an element described by the selector in the CI/CD variable.
-If no element is found, authentication is deemed to be unsuccessful.
-
-For example:
-
-```yaml
-include:
- - template: DAST.gitlab-ci.yml
-
-dast:
- variables:
- DAST_WEBSITE: "https://example.com"
- DAST_BROWSER_SCAN: "true" # use the browser-based GitLab DAST crawler
- ...
- DAST_AUTH_VERIFICATION_SELECTOR: "css:.welcome-user"
-```
-
-#### Verify based on presence of a login form
-
-When `DAST_AUTH_VERIFICATION_LOGIN_FORM` is configured, the page displayed in the browser tab is searched for a form that is detected to be a login form.
-If any such form is found, authentication is deemed to be unsuccessful.
-
-For example:
-
-```yaml
-include:
- - template: DAST.gitlab-ci.yml
-
-dast:
- variables:
- DAST_WEBSITE: "https://example.com"
- DAST_BROWSER_SCAN: "true" # use the browser-based GitLab DAST crawler
- ...
- DAST_AUTH_VERIFICATION_LOGIN_FORM: "true"
-```
-
-### View the login form
-
-Many web applications show the user the login form in a pop-up (modal) window.
-For these applications, navigating to the form requires both:
-
-- A starting URL.
-- A list of elements to select to display the modal window.
-
-When `DAST_BROWSER_PATH_TO_LOGIN_FORM` is present, like in this example:
-
-```yaml
-include:
- - template: DAST.gitlab-ci.yml
-
-dast:
- variables:
- DAST_WEBSITE: "https://my.site.com"
- DAST_BROWSER_SCAN: "true" # use the browser-based GitLab DAST crawler
- ...
- DAST_AUTH_URL: "https://my.site.com/admin"
- DAST_BROWSER_PATH_TO_LOGIN_FORM: "css:.navigation-menu,css:.login-menu-item"
-```
-
-DAST performs these actions:
-
-1. Load the `DAST_AUTH_URL` page, such as `https://my.site.com/admin`.
-1. After the page loads, DAST selects elements found by the selectors described
- in `DAST_BROWSER_PATH_TO_LOGIN_FORM`. This example opens the navigation menu
- and selects the login menu, to display the login modal window.
-1. To continue the authentication process, DAST fills in the username and password
- on the login form.
-
-### Configure the authentication debug output
-
-It is often difficult to understand the cause of an authentication failure when running DAST in a CI/CD pipeline.
-To assist users in debugging authentication issues, a debug report can be generated and saved as a job artifact.
-This HTML report contains all steps made during the login process, along with HTTP requests and responses, the Document Object Model (DOM) and screenshots.
-
-![dast-auth-report](img/dast_auth_report.jpg)
-
-An example configuration where the authentication debug report is exported may look like the following:
-
-```yaml
-dast:
- variables:
- DAST_WEBSITE: "https://example.com"
- DAST_BROWSER_SCAN: "true" # use the browser-based GitLab DAST crawler
- ...
- DAST_AUTH_REPORT: "true"
- artifacts:
- paths: [gl-dast-debug-auth-report.html]
- when: always
-```
-
-### Selectors
-
-Selectors are used by CI/CD variables to specify the location of an element displayed on a page in a browser.
-Selectors have the format `type`:`search string`. The crawler searches for the selector using the search string based on the type.
-
-| Selector type | Example | Description |
-| ------------- | ---------------------------------- | ----------- |
-| `css` | `css:.password-field` | Searches for a HTML element having the supplied CSS selector. Selectors should be as specific as possible for performance reasons. |
-| `id` | `id:element` | Searches for an HTML element with the provided element ID. |
-| `name` | `name:element` | Searches for an HTML element with the provided element name. |
-| `xpath` | `xpath://input[@id="my-button"]/a` | Searches for a HTML element with the provided XPath. Note that XPath searches are expected to be less performant than other searches. |
-| None provided | `a.click-me` | Defaults to searching using a CSS selector. |
-
-#### Find selectors with Google Chrome
-
-Chrome DevTools element selector tool is an effective way to find a selector.
-
-1. Open Chrome and navigate to the page where you would like to find a selector, for example, the login page for your site.
-1. Open the `Elements` tab in Chrome DevTools with the keyboard shortcut `Command + Shift + c` in macOS or `Ctrl + Shift + c` in Windows.
-1. Select the `Select an element in the page to select it` tool.
- ![search-elements](img/dast_auth_browser_scan_search_elements.png)
-1. Select the field on your page that you would like to know the selector for.
-1. Once the tool is active, highlight a field you wish to view the details of.
- ![highlight](img/dast_auth_browser_scan_highlight.png)
-1. Once highlighted, you can see the element's details, including attributes that would make a good candidate for a selector.
-
-In this example, the `id="user_login"` appears to be a good candidate. You can use this as a selector as the DAST username field by setting
-`DAST_USERNAME_FIELD: "id:user_login"`.
-
-#### Choose the right selector
-
-Judicious choice of selector leads to a scan that is resilient to the application changing.
-
-In order of preference, it is recommended to choose as selectors:
-
-- `id` fields. These are generally unique on a page, and rarely change.
-- `name` fields. These are generally unique on a page, and rarely change.
-- `class` values specific to the field, such as the selector `"css:.username"` for the `username` class on the username field.
-- Presence of field specific data attributes, such as the selector, `"css:[data-username]"` when the `data-username` field has any value on the username field.
-- Multiple `class` hierarchy values, such as the selector `"css:.login-form .username"` when there are multiple elements with class `username` but only one nested inside the element with the class `login-form`.
-
-When using selectors to locate specific fields we recommend you avoid searching on:
-
-- Any `id`, `name`, `attribute`, `class` or `value` that is dynamically generated.
-- Generic class names, such as `column-10` and `dark-grey`.
-- XPath searches as they are less performant than other selector searches.
-- Unscoped searches, such as those beginning with `css:*` and `xpath://*`.
-
-### Bleeding-edge vulnerability definitions
-
-ZAP first creates rules in the `alpha` class. After a testing period with
-the community, they are promoted to `beta`. DAST uses `beta` definitions by
-default. To request `alpha` definitions, use the
-`DAST_INCLUDE_ALPHA_VULNERABILITIES` CI/CD variable as shown in the
-following configuration:
-
-```yaml
-include:
- template: DAST.gitlab-ci.yml
-
-variables:
- DAST_INCLUDE_ALPHA_VULNERABILITIES: "true"
-```
-
-### Cloning the project's repository
-
-The DAST job does not require the project's repository to be present when running, so by default
-[`GIT_STRATEGY`](../../../ci/runners/configure_runners.md#git-strategy) is set to `none`.
-
-## On-demand scans
-
-> - [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/218465) in GitLab 13.2.
-> - [Improved](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/218465) in GitLab 13.3.
-> - The saved scans feature was [introduced](https://gitlab.com/groups/gitlab-org/-/epics/5100) in GitLab 13.9.
-> - The option to select a branch was [introduced](https://gitlab.com/groups/gitlab-org/-/epics/4847) in GitLab 13.10.
-> - DAST branch selection [feature flag removed](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/322672) in GitLab 13.11.
-> - Auditing for DAST profile management was [introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/217872) in GitLab 14.1.
-
-An on-demand DAST scan runs outside the DevOps life cycle. Changes in your repository don't trigger
-the scan. You must either start it manually, or schedule it to run.
-
-An on-demand DAST scan:
-
-- Can run a specific combination of a [site profile](#site-profile) and a
- [scanner profile](#scanner-profile).
-- Is associated with your project's default branch.
-- Is saved on creation so it can be run later.
-
-### On-demand scan modes
-
-An on-demand scan can be run in active or passive mode:
-
-- _Passive mode_ is the default and runs a ZAP Baseline Scan.
-- _Active mode_ runs a ZAP Full Scan which is potentially harmful to the site being scanned. To
- minimize the risk of accidental damage, running an active scan requires a [validated site profile](#site-profile-validation).
-
-### View on-demand DAST scans
-
-To view running completed and scheduled on-demand DAST scans for a project, go to
-**Security & Compliance > On-demand Scans** in the left sidebar.
-
-- To view both running and completed scans, select **All**.
-- To view running scans only, select **Running**.
-- To view finished scans, select **Finished**. A finished scan is a scan that either succeeded,
- failed, or was canceled.
-- To view scheduled scans, select **Scheduled**. It shows on-demand scans that have a schedule
- set up. Those are _not_ included in the **All** tab.
-- To view saved on-demand scan profiles, select **Scan library**.
- Those are _not_ included in the **All** tab.
-
-#### Cancel an on-demand scan
-
-To cancel a pending or running on-demand scan, select **Cancel** (**{cancel}**) in the
-on-demand scans list.
-
-#### Retry an on-demand scan
-
-To retry a scan that failed or succeeded with warnings, select **Retry** (**{retry}**) in the
-on-demand scans list.
-
-#### View an on-demand scan's results
-
-To view a finished scan's results, select **View results** in the on-demand scans list.
-
-#### Edit an on-demand scan
-
-To edit an on-demand scan's settings, select **Edit** (**{pencil}**) in the **Scheduled** tab.
-
-### Run an on-demand DAST scan
-
-Prerequisites:
-
-- You must have permission to run an on-demand DAST scan against a protected branch. The default
- branch is automatically protected. For more information, read
- [Pipeline security on protected branches](../../../ci/pipelines/index.md#pipeline-security-on-protected-branches).
-- A [scanner profile](#create-a-scanner-profile).
-- A [site profile](#create-a-site-profile).
-- If you are running an active scan the site profile must have been [validated](#validate-a-site-profile).
-
-You can run an on-demand scan immediately, once at a scheduled date and time or at a specified
-frequency:
-
-- Every day
-- Every week
-- Every month
-- Every 3 months
-- Every 6 months
-- Every year
-
-To run an on-demand scan immediately, either:
-
-- [Create and run an on-demand scan immediately](#create-and-run-an-on-demand-scan-immediately).
-- [Run a previously saved on-demand scan](#run-a-saved-on-demand-scan).
-
-To run an on-demand scan either at a scheduled date or frequency, read
-[Schedule an on-demand scan](#schedule-an-on-demand-scan).
-
-#### Create and run an on-demand scan immediately
-
-1. From your project's home page, go to **Security & Compliance > On-demand Scans** in the left
- sidebar.
-1. Select **New scan**.
-1. Complete the **Scan name** and **Description** fields.
-1. In GitLab 13.10 and later, select the desired branch from the **Branch** dropdown list.
-1. In **Scanner profile**, select a scanner profile from the dropdown list.
-1. In **Site profile**, select a site profile from the dropdown list.
-1. To run the on-demand scan immediately, select **Save and run scan**. Otherwise, select
- **Save scan** to [run](#run-a-saved-on-demand-scan) it later.
-
-The on-demand DAST scan runs and the project's dashboard shows the results.
-
-#### Run a saved on-demand scan
-
-To run a saved on-demand scan:
-
-1. On the top bar, select **Main menu > Projects** and find your project.
-1. On the left sidebar, select **Security & Compliance > On-demand Scans**.
-1. Select the **Scan library** tab.
-1. In the scan's row, select **Run scan**.
-
- If the branch saved in the scan no longer exists, you must first
- [edit the scan](#edit-an-on-demand-scan), select a new branch, and save the edited scan.
-
-The on-demand DAST scan runs, and the project's dashboard shows the results.
-
-#### Schedule an on-demand scan
-
-> - [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/328749) in GitLab 14.3. [Deployed behind the `dast_on_demand_scans_scheduler` flag](../../../administration/feature_flags.md), disabled by default.
-> - [Enabled on GitLab.com](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/328749) in GitLab 14.4.
-> - [Enabled on self-managed](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/328749) in GitLab 14.4.
-> - [Feature flag `dast_on_demand_scans_scheduler` removed](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/328749) in GitLab 14.5.
-
-To schedule a scan:
-
-1. On the top bar, select **Main menu > Projects** and find your project.
-1. On the left sidebar, select **Security & Compliance > On-demand Scans**.
-1. Select **New scan**.
-1. Complete the **Scan name** and **Description** text boxes.
-1. In GitLab 13.10 and later, from the **Branch** dropdown list, select the desired branch.
-1. In the **Scanner profile** section, from the dropdown list, select a scanner profile.
-1. In the **Site profile** section, from the dropdown list, select a site profile.
-1. Select **Schedule scan**.
-1. In the **Start time** section, select a time zone, date, and time.
-1. From the **Repeats** dropdown list, select your desired frequency:
- - To run the scan once, select **Never**.
- - For a recurring scan, select any other option.
-1. To run the on-demand scan immediately, select **Save and run scan**. To [run](#run-a-saved-on-demand-scan) it according to the schedule you set, select
- **Save scan**.
-
-#### List saved on-demand scans
-
-To list saved on-demand scans:
-
-1. From your project's home page, go to **Security & Compliance > On-demand Scans**.
-1. Select the **Scan library** tab.
-
-#### View details of an on-demand scan
-
-To view details of an on-demand scan:
-
-1. From your project's home page, go to **Security & Compliance > On-demand Scans**.
-1. Select the **Scan library** tab.
-1. In the saved scan's row select **More actions** (**{ellipsis_v}**), then select **Edit**.
-
-#### Edit an on-demand scan
-
-To edit an on-demand scan:
-
-1. From your project's home page, go to **Security & Compliance > On-demand Scans**.
-1. Select the **Scan library** tab.
-1. In the saved scan's row select **More actions** (**{ellipsis_v}**), then select **Edit**.
-1. Edit the form.
-1. Select **Save scan**.
-
-#### Delete an on-demand scan
-
-To delete an on-demand scan:
-
-1. From your project's home page, go to **Security & Compliance > On-demand Scans**.
-1. Select the **Scan library** tab.
-1. In the saved scan's row select **More actions** (**{ellipsis_v}**), then select **Delete**.
-1. Select **Delete** to confirm the deletion.
-
-## Site profile
-
-> - Scan method [Enabled on GitLab.com and self-managed](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/345837) in GitLab 15.6.
-> - File URL [Enabled on GitLab.com and self-managed](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/345837) in GitLab 15.6.
-
-A site profile defines the attributes and configuration details of the deployed application,
-website, or API to be scanned by DAST. A site profile can be referenced in `.gitlab-ci.yml` and
-on-demand scans.
-
-A site profile contains:
-
-- **Profile name**: A name you assign to the site to be scanned. While a site profile is referenced
- in either `.gitlab-ci.yml` or an on-demand scan, it **cannot** be renamed.
-- **Site type**: The type of target to be scanned, either website or API scan.
-- **Target URL**: The URL that DAST runs against.
-- **Excluded URLs**: A comma-separated list of URLs to exclude from the scan.
-- **Request headers**: A comma-separated list of HTTP request headers, including names and values. These headers are added to every request made by DAST.
-- **Authentication**:
- - **Authenticated URL**: The URL of the page containing the sign-in HTML form on the target website. The username and password are submitted with the login form to create an authenticated scan.
- - **Username**: The username used to authenticate to the website.
- - **Password**: The password used to authenticate to the website.
- - **Username form field**: The name of username field at the sign-in HTML form.
- - **Password form field**: The name of password field at the sign-in HTML form.
- - **Submit form field**: The `id` or `name` of the element that when selected submits the sign-in HTML form.
-
-- **Scan method**: A type of method to perform API testing. The supported methods are OpenAPI, Postman Collections, and HTTP Archive (HAR) documents.
-- **File URL**: The URL of the OpenAPI, Postman Collection, or HTTP Archive file.
-
-When an API site type is selected, a [host override](#host-override) is used to ensure the API being scanned is on the same host as the target. This is done to reduce the risk of running an active scan against the wrong API.
-
-When configured, request headers and password fields are encrypted using [`aes-256-gcm`](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Advanced_Encryption_Standard) before being stored in the database.
-This data can only be read and decrypted with a valid secrets file.
-
-### Site profile validation
-
-> - Site profile validation [introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/233020) in GitLab 13.8.
-> - Meta tag validation [introduced](https://gitlab.com/groups/gitlab-org/-/epics/6460) in GitLab 14.2.
-
-Site profile validation reduces the risk of running an active scan against the wrong website. A site
-must be validated before an active scan can run against it. The site validation methods are as
-follows:
-
-- _Text file validation_ requires a text file be uploaded to the target site. The text file is
- allocated a name and content that is unique to the project. The validation process checks the
- file's content.
-- _Header validation_ requires the header `Gitlab-On-Demand-DAST` be added to the target site,
- with a value unique to the project. The validation process checks that the header is present, and
- checks its value.
-- _Meta tag validation_ requires the meta tag named `gitlab-dast-validation` be added to the target site,
- with a value unique to the project. Make sure it's added to the `<head>` section of the page. The validation process checks that the meta tag is present, and
- checks its value.
-
-All these methods are equivalent in functionality. Use whichever is feasible.
-
-In [GitLab 14.2 and later](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/324990), site profile
-validation happens in a CI job using the [GitLab Runner](../../../ci/runners/index.md).
-
-### Create a site profile
-
-To create a site profile:
-
-1. From your project's home page, go to **Security & Compliance > Configuration**.
-1. Select **Manage** in the **DAST Profiles** row.
-1. Select **New > Site Profile**.
-1. Complete the fields then select **Save profile**.
-
-The site profile is created.
-
-### Edit a site profile
-
-If a site profile is linked to a security policy, a user cannot edit the profile from this page. See
-[Scan execution policies](../policies/scan-execution-policies.md)
-for more information.
-
-When a validated site profile's file, header, or meta tag is edited, the site's
-[validation status](#site-profile-validation) is revoked.
-
-To edit a site profile:
-
-1. From your project's home page, go to **Security & Compliance > Configuration**.
-1. In the **DAST Profiles** row select **Manage**.
-1. Select the **Site Profiles** tab.
-1. In the profile's row select the **More actions** (**{ellipsis_v}**) menu, then select **Edit**.
-1. Edit the fields then select **Save profile**.
-
-### Delete a site profile
-
-If a site profile is linked to a security policy, a user cannot delete the profile from this page.
-See [Scan execution policies](../policies/scan-execution-policies.md)
-for more information.
-
-To delete a site profile:
-
-1. From your project's home page, go to **Security & Compliance > Configuration**.
-1. In the **DAST Profiles** row select **Manage**.
-1. Select the **Site Profiles** tab.
-1. In the profile's row, select the **More actions** (**{ellipsis_v}**) menu, then select **Delete**.
-1. Select **Delete** to confirm the deletion.
-
-### Validate a site profile
-
-Validating a site is required to run an active scan.
-
-To validate a site profile:
-
-1. On the top bar, select **Main menu > Projects** and find your project.
-1. On the left sidebar, select **Security & Compliance > Configuration**.
-1. In the **Dynamic Application Security Testing (DAST)** section, select **Manage profiles**.
-1. Select the **Site Profiles** tab.
-1. In the profile's row, select **Validate**.
-1. Select the validation method.
- 1. For **Text file validation**:
- 1. Download the validation file listed in **Step 2**.
- 1. Upload the validation file to the host, to the location in **Step 3** or any location you
- prefer.
- 1. If required, edit the file location in **Step 3**.
- 1. Select **Validate**.
- 1. For **Header validation**:
- 1. Select the clipboard icon in **Step 2**.
- 1. Edit the header of the site to validate, and paste the clipboard content.
- 1. Select the input field in **Step 3** and enter the location of the header.
- 1. Select **Validate**.
- 1. For **Meta tag validation**:
- 1. Select the clipboard icon in **Step 2**.
- 1. Edit the content of the site to validate, and paste the clipboard content.
- 1. Select the input field in **Step 3** and enter the location of the meta tag.
- 1. Select **Validate**.
-
-The site is validated and an active scan can run against it. A site profile's validation status is
-revoked only when it's revoked manually, or its file, header, or meta tag is edited.
-
-### Retry a failed validation
-
-> - [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/322609) in GitLab 14.3.
-> - [Deployed behind the `dast_failed_site_validations` flag](../../../administration/feature_flags.md), enabled by default.
-> - [Feature flag `dast_failed_site_validations` removed](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/323961) in GitLab 14.4.
-
-Failed site validation attempts are listed on the **Site profiles** tab of the **Manage profiles**
-page.
-
-To retry a site profile's failed validation:
-
-1. On the top bar, select **Main menu > Projects** and find your project.
-1. On the left sidebar, select **Security & Compliance > Configuration**.
-1. In the **Dynamic Application Security Testing (DAST)** section, select **Manage profiles**.
-1. Select the **Site Profiles** tab.
-1. In the profile's row, select **Retry validation**.
-
-### Revoke a site profile's validation status
-
-WARNING:
-When a site profile's validation status is revoked, all site profiles that share the same URL also
-have their validation status revoked.
-
-To revoke a site profile's validation status:
-
-1. From your project's home page, go to **Security & Compliance > Configuration**.
-1. In the **DAST Profiles** row select **Manage**.
-1. Beside the validated profile, select **Revoke validation**.
-
-The site profile's validation status is revoked.
-
-### Validated site profile headers
-
-The following are code samples of how you can provide the required site profile header in your
-application.
-
-#### Ruby on Rails example for on-demand scan
-
-Here's how you can add a custom header in a Ruby on Rails application:
-
-```ruby
-class DastWebsiteTargetController < ActionController::Base
- def dast_website_target
- response.headers['Gitlab-On-Demand-DAST'] = '0dd79c9a-7b29-4e26-a815-eaaf53fcab1c'
- head :ok
- end
-end
-```
-
-#### Django example for on-demand scan
-
-Here's how you can add a
-[custom header in Django](https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/2.2/ref/request-response/#setting-header-fields):
-
-```python
-class DastWebsiteTargetView(View):
- def head(self, *args, **kwargs):
- response = HttpResponse()
- response['Gitlab-On-Demand-DAST'] = '0dd79c9a-7b29-4e26-a815-eaaf53fcab1c'
-
- return response
-```
-
-#### Node (with Express) example for on-demand scan
-
-Here's how you can add a
-[custom header in Node (with Express)](https://expressjs.com/en/5x/api.html#res.append):
-
-```javascript
-app.get('/dast-website-target', function(req, res) {
- res.append('Gitlab-On-Demand-DAST', '0dd79c9a-7b29-4e26-a815-eaaf53fcab1c')
- res.send('Respond to DAST ping')
-})
-```
-
-## Scanner profile
-
-> - [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/222767) in GitLab 13.4.
-> - [Added](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/225804) in GitLab 13.5: scan mode, AJAX spider, debug messages.
-
-A scanner profile defines the configuration details of a security scanner. A scanner profile can be
-referenced in `.gitlab-ci.yml` and on-demand scans.
-
-A scanner profile contains:
-
-- **Profile name:** A name you give the scanner profile. For example, "Spider_15". While a scanner
- profile is referenced in either `.gitlab-ci.yml` or an on-demand scan, it **cannot** be renamed.
-- **Scan mode:** A passive scan monitors all HTTP messages (requests and responses) sent to the target. An active scan attacks the target to find potential vulnerabilities.
-- **Spider timeout:** The maximum number of minutes allowed for the spider to traverse the site.
-- **Target timeout:** The maximum number of seconds DAST waits for the site to be available before
- starting the scan.
-- **AJAX spider:** Run the AJAX spider, in addition to the traditional spider, to crawl the target site.
-- **Debug messages:** Include debug messages in the DAST console output.
-
-### Create a scanner profile
-
-To create a scanner profile:
-
-1. From your project's home page, go to **Security & Compliance > Configuration**.
-1. In the **DAST Profiles** row, select **Manage**.
-1. Select **New > Scanner Profile**.
-1. Complete the form. For details of each field, see [Scanner profile](#scanner-profile).
-1. Select **Save profile**.
-
-### Edit a scanner profile
-
-If a scanner profile is linked to a security policy, a user cannot edit the profile from this page.
-See [Scan execution policies](../policies/scan-execution-policies.md)
-for more information.
-
-To edit a scanner profile:
-
-1. From your project's home page, go to **Security & Compliance > Configuration**.
-1. In the **DAST Profiles** row, select **Manage**.
-1. Select the **Scanner Profiles** tab.
-1. In the scanner's row, select the **More actions** (**{ellipsis_v}**) menu, then select **Edit**.
-1. Edit the form.
-1. Select **Save profile**.
-
-### Delete a scanner profile
-
-If a scanner profile is linked to a security policy, a user cannot delete the profile from this
-page. See [Scan execution policies](../policies/scan-execution-policies.md)
-for more information.
-
-To delete a scanner profile:
-
-1. From your project's home page, go to **Security & Compliance > Configuration**.
-1. In the **DAST Profiles** row, select **Manage**.
-1. Select the **Scanner Profiles** tab.
-1. In the scanner's row, select the **More actions** (**{ellipsis_v}**) menu, then select **Delete**.
-1. Select **Delete**.
-
-## Auditing
-
-> [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/217872) in GitLab 14.1.
-
-The creation, updating, and deletion of DAST profiles, DAST scanner profiles,
-and DAST site profiles are included in the [audit log](../../../administration/audit_events.md).
-
-## Reports
-
-The DAST tool outputs a `gl-dast-report.json` report file containing details of the scan and its results.
-This file is included in the job's artifacts. JSON is the default format, but
-you can output the report in Markdown, HTML, and XML formats. To specify an alternative
-format, use a [CI/CD variable](#available-cicd-variables). You can also use a CI/CD variable
-to configure the job to output the `gl-dast-debug-auth-report.html` file which helps when debugging
-authentication issues.
-
-For details of the report's schema, see the [schema for DAST reports](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/security-products/security-report-schemas/-/blob/master/dist/dast-report-format.json). Example reports can be found in the
-[DAST repository](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/security-products/dast/-/tree/main/test/end-to-end/expect).
-
-WARNING:
-The JSON report artifacts are not a public API of DAST and their format is expected to change in the
-future.
-
-## Optimizing DAST
-
-By default, DAST downloads all artifacts defined by previous jobs in the pipeline. If
-your DAST job does not rely on `environment_url.txt` to define the URL under test or any other files created
-in previous jobs, we recommend you don't download artifacts. To avoid downloading
-artifacts, add the following to your `.gitlab-ci.yml` file:
-
-```yaml
-dast:
- dependencies: []
-```
diff --git a/doc/user/application_security/dast/proxy-based.md b/doc/user/application_security/dast/proxy-based.md
new file mode 100644
index 00000000000..ec98b809fb7
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/user/application_security/dast/proxy-based.md
@@ -0,0 +1,1247 @@
+---
+stage: Secure
+group: Dynamic Analysis
+info: To determine the technical writer assigned to the Stage/Group associated with this page, see https://about.gitlab.com/handbook/product/ux/technical-writing/#assignments
+type: reference, howto
+---
+
+# DAST proxy-based analyzer **(ULTIMATE)**
+
+The DAST proxy-based analyzer can be added to your [GitLab CI/CD](../../../ci/index.md) pipeline.
+This helps you discover vulnerabilities in web applications that do not use JavaScript heavily. For applications that do,
+please see the [DAST browser-based analyzer](browser_based.md).
+
+WARNING:
+Do not run DAST scans against a production server. Not only can it perform *any* function that
+a user can, such as clicking buttons or submitting forms, but it may also trigger bugs, leading to modification or loss of production data. Only run DAST scans against a test server.
+
+The analyzer uses the [OWASP Zed Attack Proxy](https://www.zaproxy.org/) (ZAP) to scan in two different ways:
+
+- Passive scan only (default). DAST executes
+ [ZAP's Baseline Scan](https://www.zaproxy.org/docs/docker/baseline-scan/) and doesn't
+ actively attack your application.
+- Passive and active (or full) scan. DAST can be [configured](#full-scan) to also perform an active scan
+ to attack your application and produce a more extensive security report. It can be very
+ useful when combined with [Review Apps](../../../ci/review_apps/index.md).
+
+## DAST run options
+
+You can use DAST to examine your web application:
+
+- Automatically, initiated by a merge request.
+- Manually, initiated on demand.
+
+Some of the differences between these run options:
+
+| Automatic scan | On-demand scan |
+|:-----------------------------------------------------------------|:------------------------------|
+| DAST scan is initiated by a merge request. | DAST scan is initiated manually, outside the DevOps life cycle. |
+| CI/CD variables are sourced from `.gitlab-ci.yml`. | CI/CD variables are provided in the UI. |
+| All [DAST CI/CD variables](#available-cicd-variables) available. | Subset of [DAST CI/CD variables](#available-cicd-variables) available. |
+| `DAST.gitlab-ci.yml` template. | `DAST-On-Demand-Scan.gitlab-ci.yml` template. |
+
+### Enable automatic DAST run
+
+To enable DAST to run automatically, either:
+
+- Enable [Auto DAST](../../../topics/autodevops/stages.md#auto-dast) (provided
+ by [Auto DevOps](../../../topics/autodevops/index.md)).
+- [Include the DAST template](#include-the-dast-template) in your existing
+ `.gitlab-ci.yml` file.
+- [Configure DAST using the UI](#configure-dast-using-the-ui).
+
+#### Include the DAST template
+
+> - This template was [updated](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/merge_requests/62597) to DAST_VERSION: 2 in GitLab 14.0.
+> - This template was [updated](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/merge_requests/87183) to DAST_VERSION: 3 in GitLab 15.0.
+
+If you want to manually add DAST to your application, the DAST job is defined
+in a CI/CD template file. Updates to the template are provided with GitLab
+upgrades, allowing you to benefit from any improvements and additions.
+
+To include the DAST template:
+
+1. Select the CI/CD template you want to use:
+
+ - [`DAST.gitlab-ci.yml`](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/blob/master/lib/gitlab/ci/templates/Security/DAST.gitlab-ci.yml):
+ Stable version of the DAST CI/CD template.
+ - [`DAST.latest.gitlab-ci.yml`](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/blob/master/lib/gitlab/ci/templates/Security/DAST.latest.gitlab-ci.yml):
+ Latest version of the DAST template. ([Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/254325)
+ in GitLab 13.8).
+
+ WARNING:
+ The latest version of the template may include breaking changes. Use the
+ stable template unless you need a feature provided only in the latest template.
+
+ For more information about template versioning, see the
+ [CI/CD documentation](../../../development/cicd/templates.md#latest-version).
+
+1. Add a `dast` stage to your GitLab CI stages configuration:
+
+ ```yaml
+ stages:
+ - dast
+ ```
+
+1. Add the template to GitLab, based on your version of GitLab:
+
+ - In GitLab 11.9 and later, [include](../../../ci/yaml/index.md#includetemplate)
+ the template by adding the following to your `.gitlab-ci.yml` file:
+
+ ```yaml
+ include:
+ - template: <template_file.yml>
+
+ variables:
+ DAST_WEBSITE: https://example.com
+ ```
+
+ - In GitLab 11.8 and earlier, add the contents of the template to your
+ `.gitlab_ci.yml` file.
+
+1. Define the URL to be scanned by DAST by using one of these methods:
+
+ - Set the `DAST_WEBSITE` [CI/CD variable](../../../ci/yaml/index.md#variables).
+ If set, this value takes precedence.
+
+ - Add the URL in an `environment_url.txt` file at the root of your project. This is
+ useful for testing in dynamic environments. To run DAST against an application
+ dynamically created during a GitLab CI/CD pipeline, a job that runs prior to
+ the DAST scan must persist the application's domain in an `environment_url.txt`
+ file. DAST automatically parses the `environment_url.txt` file to find its
+ scan target.
+
+ For example, in a job that runs prior to DAST, you could include code that
+ looks similar to:
+
+ ```yaml
+ script:
+ - echo http://${CI_PROJECT_ID}-${CI_ENVIRONMENT_SLUG}.domain.com > environment_url.txt
+ artifacts:
+ paths: [environment_url.txt]
+ when: always
+ ```
+
+ You can see an example of this in our
+ [Auto DevOps CI YAML](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/blob/master/lib/gitlab/ci/templates/Jobs/Deploy.gitlab-ci.yml)
+ file.
+
+The included template creates a `dast` job in your CI/CD pipeline and scans
+your project's running application for possible vulnerabilities.
+
+The results are saved as a
+[DAST report artifact](../../../ci/yaml/artifacts_reports.md#artifactsreportsdast)
+that you can later download and analyze. Due to implementation limitations, we
+always take the latest DAST artifact available. Behind the scenes, the
+[GitLab DAST Docker image](https://gitlab.com/security-products/dast)
+is used to run the tests on the specified URL and scan it for possible
+vulnerabilities.
+
+By default, the DAST template uses the latest major version of the DAST Docker
+image. Using the `DAST_VERSION` variable, you can choose how DAST updates:
+
+- Automatically update DAST with new features and fixes by pinning to a major
+ version (such as `1`).
+- Only update fixes by pinning to a minor version (such as `1.6`).
+- Prevent all updates by pinning to a specific version (such as `1.6.4`).
+
+Find the latest DAST versions on the [Releases](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/security-products/dast/-/releases)
+page.
+
+#### Configure DAST using the UI
+
+You can enable or configure DAST settings using the UI. The generated settings are formatted so they
+can be conveniently pasted into the `.gitlab-ci.yml` file.
+
+1. On the top bar, select **Main menu > Projects** and find your project.
+1. On the left sidebar, select **Security & Compliance > Configuration**.
+1. In the **Dynamic Application Security Testing (DAST)** section, select **Enable DAST** or
+ **Configure DAST**.
+1. Select the desired **Scanner profile**, or select **Create scanner profile** and save a
+ scanner profile. For more details, see [scanner profiles](#scanner-profile).
+1. Select the desired **Site profile**, or select **Create site profile** and save a site
+ profile. For more details, see [site profiles](#site-profile).
+1. Select **Generate code snippet**. A modal opens with the YAML snippet corresponding to the
+ options you selected.
+1. Do one of the following:
+ 1. To copy the snippet to your clipboard, select **Copy code only**.
+ 1. To add the snippet to your project's `.gitlab-ci.yml` file, select
+ **Copy code and open `.gitlab-ci.yml` file**. The Pipeline Editor opens.
+ 1. Paste the snippet into the `.gitlab-ci.yml` file.
+ 1. Select the **Lint** tab to confirm the edited `.gitlab-ci.yml` file is valid.
+ 1. Select the **Edit** tab, then select **Commit changes**.
+
+When the snippet is committed to the `.gitlab-ci.yml` file, pipelines include a DAST job.
+
+### API scan
+
+> - [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/10928) in GitLab 12.10.
+> - A new DAST API scanning engine was introduced in GitLab 13.10.
+
+Using an API specification as a scan's target is a useful way to seed URLs for scanning an API.
+Vulnerability rules in an API scan are different than those in a normal website scan.
+
+A new DAST API scanning engine is available in GitLab 13.12 and later. For more details, see [DAST API scanning engine](../dast_api). The new scanning engine supports REST, SOAP, GraphQL, and generic APIs using forms, XML, and JSON. Testing can be performed using OpenAPI, Postman Collections, and HTTP Archive (HAR) documents.
+
+The target API instance's base URL is provided by using the `DAST_API_TARGET_URL` variable or an `environment_url.txt` file.
+
+#### Specification format
+
+API scans support OpenAPI V2 and OpenAPI V3 specifications. You can define these specifications using `JSON` or `YAML`.
+
+#### Import API specification from a URL
+
+If your API specification is accessible at a URL, you can pass that URL in directly as the target.
+The specification does not have to be hosted on the same host as the API being tested.
+
+```yaml
+include:
+ - template: DAST-API.gitlab-ci.yml
+
+variables:
+ DAST_API_SPECIFICATION: http://my.api/api-specification.yml
+```
+
+#### Import API specification from a file
+
+If your API specification file is in your repository, you can provide its filename as the target.
+
+```yaml
+dast:
+ variables:
+ GIT_STRATEGY: fetch
+ DAST_API_SPECIFICATION: api-specification.yml
+```
+
+#### Full API scan
+
+API scans support full scanning, which can be enabled by using the `DAST_FULL_SCAN_ENABLED`
+CI/CD variable. Domain validation is not supported for full API scans.
+
+#### Host override
+
+Specifications often define a host, which contains a domain name and a port. The
+host referenced may be different than the host of the API's review instance.
+This can cause incorrect URLs to be imported, or a scan on an incorrect host.
+Use the `DAST_API_HOST_OVERRIDE` CI/CD variable to override these values.
+
+WARNING:
+When using the API host override feature, you cannot use the `$DAST_WEBSITE` variable to override the hostname.
+A host override is _only_ supported when importing the API specification from a URL. Attempts to override the
+host throw an error when the API specification is imported from a file. This is due to a limitation in the
+ZAP OpenAPI extension.
+
+For example, with a OpenAPI V3 specification containing:
+
+```yaml
+servers:
+ - url: https://api.host.com
+```
+
+If the test version of the API is running at `https://api-test.host.com`, then
+the following DAST configuration can be used:
+
+```yaml
+include:
+ - template: DAST-API.gitlab-ci.yml
+
+variables:
+ DAST_API_SPECIFICATION: http://api-test.host.com/api-specification.yml
+ DAST_API_HOST_OVERRIDE: api-test.host.com
+```
+
+#### Authentication using headers
+
+Tokens in request headers are often used as a way to authenticate API requests.
+You can achieve this by using the `DAST_REQUEST_HEADERS` CI/CD variable.
+Headers are applied to every request DAST makes.
+
+```yaml
+include:
+ - template: DAST-API.gitlab-ci.yml
+
+variables:
+ DAST_API_SPECIFICATION: http://api-test.api.com/api-specification.yml
+ DAST_REQUEST_HEADERS: "Authorization: Bearer my.token"
+```
+
+### URL scan
+
+> - [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/214120) in GitLab 13.4.
+> - [Improved](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/273141) in GitLab 13.11.
+
+A URL scan allows you to specify which parts of a website are scanned by DAST.
+
+#### Define the URLs to scan
+
+URLs to scan can be specified by either of the following methods:
+
+- Use `DAST_PATHS_FILE` CI/CD variable to specify the name of a file containing the paths.
+- Use `DAST_PATHS` variable to list the paths.
+
+##### Use `DAST_PATHS_FILE` CI/CD variable
+
+> [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/258825) in GitLab 13.6.
+
+To define the URLs to scan in a file, create a plain text file with one path per line.
+
+```plaintext
+page1.html
+/page2.html
+category/shoes/page1.html
+```
+
+To scan the URLs in that file, set the CI/CD variable `DAST_PATHS_FILE` to the path of that file.
+The file can be checked into the project repository or generated as an artifact by a job that
+runs before DAST.
+
+By default, DAST scans do not clone the project repository. Instruct the DAST job to clone
+the project by setting `GIT_STRATEGY` to fetch. Give a file path relative to `CI_PROJECT_DIR` to `DAST_PATHS_FILE`.
+
+```yaml
+include:
+ - template: DAST.gitlab-ci.yml
+
+variables:
+ GIT_STRATEGY: fetch
+ DAST_PATHS_FILE: url_file.txt # url_file.txt lives in the root directory of the project
+ DAST_BROWSER_SCAN: "true" # use the browser-based GitLab DAST crawler
+```
+
+##### Use `DAST_PATHS` CI/CD variable
+
+> [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/214120) in GitLab 13.4.
+
+To specify the paths to scan in a CI/CD variable, add a comma-separated list of the paths to the `DAST_PATHS`
+variable. Note that you can only scan paths of a single host.
+
+```yaml
+include:
+ - template: DAST.gitlab-ci.yml
+
+variables:
+ DAST_PATHS: "/page1.html,/category1/page1.html,/page3.html"
+ DAST_BROWSER_SCAN: "true" # use the browser-based GitLab DAST crawler
+```
+
+When using `DAST_PATHS` and `DAST_PATHS_FILE`, note the following:
+
+- `DAST_WEBSITE` must be defined when using either `DAST_PATHS_FILE` or `DAST_PATHS`. The paths listed in either use `DAST_WEBSITE` to build the URLs to scan
+- Spidering is disabled when `DAST_PATHS` or `DAST_PATHS_FILE` are defined
+- `DAST_PATHS_FILE` and `DAST_PATHS` cannot be used together
+- The `DAST_PATHS` variable has a limit of about 130kb. If you have a list or paths
+ greater than this, use `DAST_PATHS_FILE`.
+
+#### Full Scan
+
+To perform a [full scan](#full-scan) on the listed paths, use the `DAST_FULL_SCAN_ENABLED` CI/CD variable.
+
+## Customize DAST settings
+
+You can customize the behavior of DAST using both CI/CD variables and command-line options. Use of CI/CD
+variables overrides the values contained in the DAST template.
+
+### Customize DAST using CI/CD variables
+
+WARNING:
+Beginning in GitLab 13.0, the use of [`only` and `except`](../../../ci/yaml/index.md#only--except)
+is no longer supported. You must use [`rules`](../../../ci/yaml/index.md#rules) instead.
+
+The DAST settings can be changed through CI/CD variables by using the
+[`variables`](../../../ci/yaml/index.md#variables) parameter in `.gitlab-ci.yml`. For details of
+all DAST CI/CD variables, read [Available CI/CD variables](#available-cicd-variables).
+
+For example:
+
+```yaml
+include:
+ - template: DAST.gitlab-ci.yml
+
+variables:
+ DAST_WEBSITE: https://example.com
+ DAST_SPIDER_MINS: 120
+ DAST_BROWSER_SCAN: "true" # use the browser-based GitLab DAST crawler
+```
+
+Because the template is [evaluated before](../../../ci/yaml/index.md#include) the pipeline
+configuration, the last mention of the variable takes precedence.
+
+#### Enable or disable rules
+
+A complete list of the rules that DAST uses to scan for vulnerabilities can be
+found in the [ZAP documentation](https://www.zaproxy.org/docs/alerts/).
+
+`DAST_EXCLUDE_RULES` disables the rules with the given IDs.
+
+`DAST_ONLY_INCLUDE_RULES` restricts the set of rules used in the scan to
+those with the given IDs.
+
+`DAST_EXCLUDE_RULES` and `DAST_ONLY_INCLUDE_RULES` are mutually exclusive and a
+DAST scan with both configured exits with an error.
+
+By default, several rules are disabled because they either take a long time to
+run or frequently generate false positives. The complete list of disabled rules
+can be found in [`exclude_rules.yml`](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/security-products/dast/-/blob/main/src/config/exclude_rules.yml).
+
+The lists for `DAST_EXCLUDE_RULES` and `DAST_ONLY_INCLUDE_RULES` **must** be enclosed in double
+quotes (`"`), otherwise they are interpreted as numeric values.
+
+#### Hide sensitive information
+
+> [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/36332) in GitLab 13.1.
+
+HTTP request and response headers may contain sensitive information, including cookies and
+authorization credentials. By default, the following headers are masked:
+
+- `Authorization`.
+- `Proxy-Authorization`.
+- `Set-Cookie` (values only).
+- `Cookie` (values only).
+
+Using the [`DAST_MASK_HTTP_HEADERS` CI/CD variable](#available-cicd-variables), you can list the
+headers whose values you want masked. For details on how to mask headers, see
+[Customizing the DAST settings](#customize-dast-settings).
+
+#### Use Mutual TLS
+
+> [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/299596) in GitLab 14.8.
+
+Mutual TLS allows a target application server to verify that requests are from a known source. Browser-based scans do not support Mutual TLS.
+
+**Requirements**
+
+- Base64-encoded PKCS12 certificate
+- Password of the base64-encoded PKCS12 certificate
+
+To enable Mutual TLS:
+
+1. If the PKCS12 certificate is not already base64-encoded, convert it to base64 encoding. For security reasons, we recommend encoding the certificate locally, **not** using a web-hosted conversion service. For example, to encode the certificate on either macOS or Linux:
+
+ ```shell
+ base64 <path-to-pkcs12-certificate-file>
+ ```
+
+1. Create a [masked variable](../../../ci/variables/index.md) named `DAST_PKCS12_CERTIFICATE_BASE64` and store the base64-encoded PKCS12 certificate's value in that variable.
+1. Create a masked variable `DAST_PKCS12_PASSWORD` and store the PKCS12 certificate's password in that variable.
+
+#### Available CI/CD variables
+
+These CI/CD variables are specific to DAST. They can be used to customize the behavior of DAST to your requirements.
+
+WARNING:
+All customization of GitLab security scanning tools should be tested in a merge request before
+merging these changes to the default branch. Failure to do so can give unexpected results,
+including a large number of false positives.
+
+| CI/CD variable | Type | Description |
+|:-------------------------------------------------|:--------------|:------------------------------|
+| `DAST_ADVERTISE_SCAN` | boolean | Set to `true` to add a `Via` header to every request sent, advertising that the request was sent as part of a GitLab DAST scan. [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/334947) in GitLab 14.1. |
+| `DAST_AGGREGATE_VULNERABILITIES` | boolean | Vulnerability aggregation is set to `true` by default. To disable this feature and see each vulnerability individually set to `false`. [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/254043) in GitLab 14.0. |
+| `DAST_API_HOST_OVERRIDE` <sup>1</sup> | string | Used to override domains defined in API specification files. Only supported when importing the API specification from a URL. Example: `example.com:8080`. |
+| `DAST_API_SPECIFICATION` <sup>1</sup> | URL or string | The API specification to import. The specification can be hosted at a URL, or the name of a file present in the `/zap/wrk` directory. The variable `DAST_WEBSITE` must be specified if this is omitted. |
+| `DAST_AUTH_REPORT` <sup>2</sup> | boolean | Used in combination with exporting the `gl-dast-debug-auth-report.html` artifact to aid in debugging authentication issues. |
+| `DAST_AUTH_EXCLUDE_URLS` <sup>2</sup> | URLs | **{warning}** **[Removed](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/289959)** in GitLab 14.0. Replaced by `DAST_EXCLUDE_URLS`. The URLs to skip during the authenticated scan; comma-separated. Regular expression syntax can be used to match multiple URLs. For example, `.*` matches an arbitrary character sequence. Not supported for API scans. |
+| `DAST_AUTH_URL` <sup>1,2</sup> | URL | The URL of the page containing the sign-in HTML form on the target website. `DAST_USERNAME` and `DAST_PASSWORD` are submitted with the login form to create an authenticated scan. Not supported for API scans. Example: `https://login.example.com`. |
+| `DAST_AUTH_VERIFICATION_LOGIN_FORM` <sup>2</sup> | boolean | Verifies successful authentication by checking for the lack of a login form once the login form has been submitted. |
+| `DAST_AUTH_VERIFICATION_SELECTOR` <sup>2</sup> | selector | Verifies successful authentication by checking for presence of a selector once the login form has been submitted. Example: `css:.user-photo`. |
+| `DAST_AUTH_VERIFICATION_URL` <sup>1,2</sup> | URL | A URL only accessible to logged in users that DAST can use to confirm successful authentication. If provided, DAST exits if it cannot access the URL. Example: `"http://example.com/loggedin_page"`. [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/207335) in GitLab 13.8. |
+| `DAST_AUTO_UPDATE_ADDONS` | boolean | ZAP add-ons are pinned to specific versions in the DAST Docker image. Set to `true` to download the latest versions when the scan starts. Default: `false`. |
+| `DAST_BROWSER_PATH_TO_LOGIN_FORM` <sup>1,2</sup> | selector | Comma-separated list of selectors that are selected prior to attempting to enter `DAST_USERNAME` and `DAST_PASSWORD` into the login form. Example: `"css:.navigation-menu,css:.login-menu-item"`. [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/326633) in GitLab 14.1. |
+| `DAST_DEBUG` <sup>1</sup> | boolean | Enable debug message output. Default: `false`. [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/12652) in GitLab 13.1. |
+| `DAST_EXCLUDE_RULES` | string | Set to a comma-separated list of Vulnerability Rule IDs to exclude them from running during the scan. Rule IDs are numbers and can be found from the DAST log or on the [ZAP project](https://www.zaproxy.org/docs/alerts/). For example, `HTTP Parameter Override` has a rule ID of `10026`. Cannot be used when `DAST_ONLY_INCLUDE_RULES` is set. **Note:** In earlier versions of GitLab the excluded rules were executed but vulnerabilities they generated were suppressed. [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/118641) in GitLab 12.10. |
+| `DAST_EXCLUDE_URLS` <sup>1,2</sup> | URLs | The URLs to skip during the authenticated scan; comma-separated. Regular expression syntax can be used to match multiple URLs. For example, `.*` matches an arbitrary character sequence. Not supported for API scans. Example, `http://example.com/sign-out`. |
+| `DAST_FIRST_SUBMIT_FIELD` <sup>2</sup> | string | The `id` or `name` of the element that when selected submits the username form of a multi-page login process. For example, `css:button[type='user-submit']`. [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-ee/issues/9894) in GitLab 12.4. |
+| `DAST_FULL_SCAN_DOMAIN_VALIDATION_REQUIRED` | boolean | **{warning}** **[Removed](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/293595)** in GitLab 14.0. Set to `true` to require domain validation when running DAST full scans. Not supported for API scans. Default: `false` |
+| `DAST_FULL_SCAN_ENABLED` <sup>1</sup> | boolean | Set to `true` to run a [ZAP Full Scan](https://github.com/zaproxy/zaproxy/wiki/ZAP-Full-Scan) instead of a [ZAP Baseline Scan](https://github.com/zaproxy/zaproxy/wiki/ZAP-Baseline-Scan). Default: `false` |
+| `DAST_HTML_REPORT` | string | The filename of the HTML report written at the end of a scan. [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/12652) in GitLab 13.1. |
+| `DAST_INCLUDE_ALPHA_VULNERABILITIES` | boolean | Set to `true` to include alpha passive and active scan rules. Default: `false`. [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/12652) in GitLab 13.1. |
+| `DAST_MARKDOWN_REPORT` | string | The filename of the Markdown report written at the end of a scan. [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/12652) in GitLab 13.1. |
+| `DAST_MASK_HTTP_HEADERS` | string | Comma-separated list of request and response headers to be masked (GitLab 13.1). Must contain **all** headers to be masked. Refer to [list of headers that are masked by default](#hide-sensitive-information). |
+| `DAST_MAX_URLS_PER_VULNERABILITY` | number | The maximum number of URLs reported for a single vulnerability. `DAST_MAX_URLS_PER_VULNERABILITY` is set to `50` by default. To list all the URLs set to `0`. [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/security-products/dast/-/merge_requests/433) in GitLab 13.12. |
+| `DAST_ONLY_INCLUDE_RULES` | string | Set to a comma-separated list of Vulnerability Rule IDs to configure the scan to run only them. Rule IDs are numbers and can be found from the DAST log or on the [ZAP project](https://www.zaproxy.org/docs/alerts/). Cannot be used when `DAST_EXCLUDE_RULES` is set. [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/250651) in GitLab 13.12. |
+| `DAST_PASSWORD` <sup>1,2</sup> | string | The password to authenticate to in the website. Example: `P@55w0rd!` |
+| `DAST_PASSWORD_FIELD` <sup>1,2</sup> | string | The selector of password field at the sign-in HTML form. Example: `id:password` |
+| `DAST_PATHS` | string | Set to a comma-separated list of URLs for DAST to scan. For example, `/page1.html,/category1/page3.html,/page2.html`. [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/214120) in GitLab 13.4. |
+| `DAST_PATHS_FILE` | string | The file path containing the paths within `DAST_WEBSITE` to scan. The file must be plain text with one path per line. [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/258825) in GitLab 13.6. |
+| `DAST_PKCS12_CERTIFICATE_BASE64` | string | The PKCS12 certificate used for sites that require Mutual TLS. Must be encoded as base64 text. |
+| `DAST_PKCS12_PASSWORD` | string | The password of the certificate used in `DAST_PKCS12_CERTIFICATE_BASE64`. |
+| `DAST_REQUEST_HEADERS` <sup>1</sup> | string | Set to a comma-separated list of request header names and values. Headers are added to every request made by DAST. For example, `Cache-control: no-cache,User-Agent: DAST/1.0` |
+| `DAST_SKIP_TARGET_CHECK` | boolean | Set to `true` to prevent DAST from checking that the target is available before scanning. Default: `false`. [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/229067) in GitLab 13.8. |
+| `DAST_SPIDER_MINS` <sup>1</sup> | number | The maximum duration of the spider scan in minutes. Set to `0` for unlimited. Default: One minute, or unlimited when the scan is a full scan. [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/12652) in GitLab 13.1. |
+| `DAST_SPIDER_START_AT_HOST` | boolean | Set to `false` to prevent DAST from resetting the target to its host before scanning. When `true`, non-host targets `http://test.site/some_path` is reset to `http://test.site` before scan. Default: `true`. [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/258805) in GitLab 13.6. |
+| `DAST_SUBMIT_FIELD` <sup>2</sup> | string | The `id` or `name` of the element that when selected submits the login form or the password form of a multi-page login process. For example, `css:button[type='submit']`. [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-ee/issues/9894) in GitLab 12.4. |
+| `DAST_TARGET_AVAILABILITY_TIMEOUT` <sup>1</sup> | number | Time limit in seconds to wait for target availability. |
+| `DAST_USE_AJAX_SPIDER` <sup>1</sup> | boolean | Set to `true` to use the AJAX spider in addition to the traditional spider, useful for crawling sites that require JavaScript. Default: `false`. [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/12652) in GitLab 13.1. |
+| `DAST_USERNAME` <sup>1,2</sup> | string | The username to authenticate to in the website. Example: `admin` |
+| `DAST_USERNAME_FIELD` <sup>1,2</sup> | string | The selector of username field at the sign-in HTML form. Example: `name:username` |
+| `DAST_XML_REPORT` | string | The filename of the XML report written at the end of a scan. [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/12652) in GitLab 13.1. |
+| `DAST_WEBSITE` <sup>1</sup> | URL | The URL of the website to scan. The variable `DAST_API_SPECIFICATION` must be specified if this is omitted. |
+| `DAST_ZAP_CLI_OPTIONS` | string | ZAP server command-line options. For example, `-Xmx3072m` would set the Java maximum memory allocation pool size. [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/12652) in GitLab 13.1. |
+| `DAST_ZAP_LOG_CONFIGURATION` | string | Set to a semicolon-separated list of additional log4j properties for the ZAP Server. Example: `logger.httpsender.name=org.parosproxy.paros.network.HttpSender;logger.httpsender.level=debug;logger.sitemap.name=org.parosproxy.paros.model.SiteMap;logger.sitemap.level=debug;` |
+| `SECURE_ANALYZERS_PREFIX` | URL | Set the Docker registry base address from which to download the analyzer. |
+
+1. Available to an on-demand DAST scan.
+1. Used for authentication.
+
+### Customize DAST using command-line options
+
+Not all DAST configuration is available via CI/CD variables. To find out all
+possible options, run the following configuration.
+Available command-line options are printed to the job log:
+
+```yaml
+include:
+ template: DAST.gitlab-ci.yml
+
+dast:
+ script:
+ - /analyze --help
+```
+
+You must then overwrite the `script` command to pass in the appropriate
+argument. For example, vulnerability definitions in alpha can be included with
+`-a`. The following configuration includes those definitions:
+
+```yaml
+include:
+ template: DAST.gitlab-ci.yml
+
+dast:
+ script:
+ - export DAST_WEBSITE=${DAST_WEBSITE:-$(cat environment_url.txt)}
+ - /analyze -a -t $DAST_WEBSITE
+```
+
+### Custom ZAProxy configuration
+
+The ZAProxy server contains many [useful configurable values](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/36437#note_245801885).
+Many key/values for `-config` remain undocumented, but there is an untested list of
+[possible keys](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/36437#note_244981023).
+Note that these options are not supported by DAST, and may break the DAST scan
+when used. An example of how to rewrite the Authorization header value with `TOKEN` follows:
+
+```yaml
+include:
+ template: DAST.gitlab-ci.yml
+
+variables:
+ DAST_ZAP_CLI_OPTIONS: "-config replacer.full_list(0).description=auth -config replacer.full_list(0).enabled=true -config replacer.full_list(0).matchtype=REQ_HEADER -config replacer.full_list(0).matchstr=Authorization -config replacer.full_list(0).regex=false -config replacer.full_list(0).replacement=TOKEN"
+```
+
+## Authentication
+
+NOTE:
+We highly recommend you configure the scanner to authenticate to the application. If you don't, it cannot check most of the application for security risks, as most
+of your application is likely not accessible without authentication. We also recommend
+you periodically confirm the scanner's authentication is still working, as this tends to break over
+time due to authentication changes to the application.
+
+Create masked CI/CD variables to pass the credentials that DAST uses.
+To create masked variables for the username and password, see [Create a custom variable in the UI](../../../ci/variables/index.md#custom-cicd-variables).
+The key of the username variable must be `DAST_USERNAME`,
+and the key of the password variable must be `DAST_PASSWORD`.
+
+After DAST has authenticated with the application, all cookies are collected from the web browser.
+For each cookie a matching session token is created for use by ZAP. This ensures ZAP is recognized
+by the application as correctly authenticated.
+
+Authentication supports single form logins, multi-step login forms, and authenticating to URLs outside of the configured target URL.
+
+WARNING:
+**Never** run an authenticated scan against a production server. When an authenticated
+scan is run, it may perform *any* function that the authenticated user can. This
+includes actions like modifying and deleting data, submitting forms, and following links.
+Only run an authenticated scan against a test server.
+
+### SSO
+
+DAST can authenticate to websites making use of SSO, with the following restrictions:
+
+- DAST cannot bypass a CAPTCHA if the authentication flow includes one.
+- DAST cannot handle multi-factor authentication like one-time passwords (OTP) by using SMS or authenticator apps.
+- DAST must get a cookie, or a local or session storage, with a sufficiently random value.
+
+The [authentication debug output](#configure-the-authentication-debug-output) can be helpful for troubleshooting SSO authentication
+with DAST.
+
+### Log in using automatic detection of the login form
+
+By providing a `DAST_USERNAME`, `DAST_PASSWORD`, and `DAST_AUTH_URL`, DAST attempts to authenticate to the
+target application by locating the login form based on a determination about whether or not the form contains username or password fields.
+
+Automatic detection is "best-effort", and depending on the application being scanned may provide either a resilient login experience or one that fails to authenticate the user.
+
+Login process:
+
+1. The `DAST_AUTH_URL` is loaded into the browser, and any forms on the page are located.
+ 1. If a form contains a username and password field, `DAST_USERNAME` and `DAST_PASSWORD` is inputted into the respective fields, the form submit button is selected and the user is logged in.
+ 1. If a form contains only a username field, it is assumed that the login form is multi-step.
+ 1. The `DAST_USERNAME` is inputted into the username field and the form submit button is selected.
+ 1. The subsequent pages loads where it is expected that a form exists and contains a password field. If found, `DAST_PASSWORD` is inputted, form submit button is selected and the user is logged in.
+
+### Log in using explicit selection of the login form
+
+By providing a `DAST_USERNAME_FIELD`, `DAST_PASSWORD_FIELD`, and `DAST_SUBMIT_FIELD`, in addition to the fields required for automatic login,
+DAST attempts to authenticate to the target application by locating the login form based on the selectors provided.
+Most applications benefit from this approach to authentication.
+
+Login process:
+
+1. The `DAST_AUTH_URL` is loaded into the browser, and any forms on the page are located.
+ 1. If the `DAST_FIRST_SUBMIT_FIELD` is not defined, then `DAST_USERNAME` is inputted into `DAST_USERNAME_FIELD`, `DAST_PASSWORD` is inputted into `DAST_PASSWORD_FIELD`, `DAST_SUBMIT_FIELD` is selected and the user is logged in.
+ 1. If the `DAST_FIRST_SUBMIT_FIELD` is defined, then it is assumed that the login form is multi-step.
+ 1. The `DAST_USERNAME` is inputted into the `DAST_USERNAME_FIELD` field and the `DAST_FIRST_SUBMIT_FIELD` is selected.
+ 1. The subsequent pages loads where the `DAST_PASSWORD` is inputted into the `DAST_PASSWORD_FIELD` field, the `DAST_SUBMIT_FIELD` is selected and the user is logged in.
+
+### Verifying successful login
+
+Once the login form has been submitted, DAST determines if the login was successful. Unsuccessful attempts at authentication cause the scan to halt.
+
+Following the submission of the login form, authentication is determined to be unsuccessful when:
+
+- A `400` or `500` series HTTP response status code is returned.
+- A new cookie/browser storage value determined to be sufficiently random has not been set.
+
+In addition to these checks, the user can configure their own verification checks.
+Each of the following checks can be used in conjunction with one another, if none are configured by default the presence of a login form is checked.
+
+#### Verifying based on the URL
+
+When `DAST_AUTH_VERIFICATION_URL` is configured, the URL displayed in the browser tab post login form submission is directly compared to the URL in the CI/CD variable.
+If these are not exactly the same, authentication is deemed to be unsuccessful.
+
+For example:
+
+```yaml
+include:
+ - template: DAST.gitlab-ci.yml
+
+dast:
+ variables:
+ DAST_WEBSITE: "https://example.com"
+ DAST_BROWSER_SCAN: "true" # use the browser-based GitLab DAST crawler
+ ...
+ DAST_AUTH_VERIFICATION_URL: "https://example.com/user/welcome"
+```
+
+#### Verify based on presence of an element
+
+When `DAST_AUTH_VERIFICATION_SELECTOR` is configured, the page displayed in the browser tab is searched for an element described by the selector in the CI/CD variable.
+If no element is found, authentication is deemed to be unsuccessful.
+
+For example:
+
+```yaml
+include:
+ - template: DAST.gitlab-ci.yml
+
+dast:
+ variables:
+ DAST_WEBSITE: "https://example.com"
+ DAST_BROWSER_SCAN: "true" # use the browser-based GitLab DAST crawler
+ ...
+ DAST_AUTH_VERIFICATION_SELECTOR: "css:.welcome-user"
+```
+
+#### Verify based on presence of a login form
+
+When `DAST_AUTH_VERIFICATION_LOGIN_FORM` is configured, the page displayed in the browser tab is searched for a form that is detected to be a login form.
+If any such form is found, authentication is deemed to be unsuccessful.
+
+For example:
+
+```yaml
+include:
+ - template: DAST.gitlab-ci.yml
+
+dast:
+ variables:
+ DAST_WEBSITE: "https://example.com"
+ DAST_BROWSER_SCAN: "true" # use the browser-based GitLab DAST crawler
+ ...
+ DAST_AUTH_VERIFICATION_LOGIN_FORM: "true"
+```
+
+### View the login form
+
+Many web applications show the user the login form in a pop-up (modal) window.
+For these applications, navigating to the form requires both:
+
+- A starting URL.
+- A list of elements to select to display the modal window.
+
+When `DAST_BROWSER_PATH_TO_LOGIN_FORM` is present, like in this example:
+
+```yaml
+include:
+ - template: DAST.gitlab-ci.yml
+
+dast:
+ variables:
+ DAST_WEBSITE: "https://my.site.com"
+ DAST_BROWSER_SCAN: "true" # use the browser-based GitLab DAST crawler
+ ...
+ DAST_AUTH_URL: "https://my.site.com/admin"
+ DAST_BROWSER_PATH_TO_LOGIN_FORM: "css:.navigation-menu,css:.login-menu-item"
+```
+
+DAST performs these actions:
+
+1. Load the `DAST_AUTH_URL` page, such as `https://my.site.com/admin`.
+1. After the page loads, DAST selects elements found by the selectors described
+ in `DAST_BROWSER_PATH_TO_LOGIN_FORM`. This example opens the navigation menu
+ and selects the login menu, to display the login modal window.
+1. To continue the authentication process, DAST fills in the username and password
+ on the login form.
+
+### Configure the authentication debug output
+
+It is often difficult to understand the cause of an authentication failure when running DAST in a CI/CD pipeline.
+To assist users in debugging authentication issues, a debug report can be generated and saved as a job artifact.
+This HTML report contains all steps made during the login process, along with HTTP requests and responses, the Document Object Model (DOM) and screenshots.
+
+![dast-auth-report](img/dast_auth_report.jpg)
+
+An example configuration where the authentication debug report is exported may look like the following:
+
+```yaml
+dast:
+ variables:
+ DAST_WEBSITE: "https://example.com"
+ DAST_BROWSER_SCAN: "true" # use the browser-based GitLab DAST crawler
+ ...
+ DAST_AUTH_REPORT: "true"
+ artifacts:
+ paths: [gl-dast-debug-auth-report.html]
+ when: always
+```
+
+### Selectors
+
+Selectors are used by CI/CD variables to specify the location of an element displayed on a page in a browser.
+Selectors have the format `type`:`search string`. The crawler searches for the selector using the search string based on the type.
+
+| Selector type | Example | Description |
+| ------------- | ---------------------------------- | ----------- |
+| `css` | `css:.password-field` | Searches for a HTML element having the supplied CSS selector. Selectors should be as specific as possible for performance reasons. |
+| `id` | `id:element` | Searches for an HTML element with the provided element ID. |
+| `name` | `name:element` | Searches for an HTML element with the provided element name. |
+| `xpath` | `xpath://input[@id="my-button"]/a` | Searches for a HTML element with the provided XPath. Note that XPath searches are expected to be less performant than other searches. |
+| None provided | `a.click-me` | Defaults to searching using a CSS selector. |
+
+#### Find selectors with Google Chrome
+
+Chrome DevTools element selector tool is an effective way to find a selector.
+
+1. Open Chrome and navigate to the page where you would like to find a selector, for example, the login page for your site.
+1. Open the `Elements` tab in Chrome DevTools with the keyboard shortcut `Command + Shift + c` in macOS or `Ctrl + Shift + c` in Windows.
+1. Select the `Select an element in the page to select it` tool.
+ ![search-elements](img/dast_auth_browser_scan_search_elements.png)
+1. Select the field on your page that you would like to know the selector for.
+1. Once the tool is active, highlight a field you wish to view the details of.
+ ![highlight](img/dast_auth_browser_scan_highlight.png)
+1. Once highlighted, you can see the element's details, including attributes that would make a good candidate for a selector.
+
+In this example, the `id="user_login"` appears to be a good candidate. You can use this as a selector as the DAST username field by setting
+`DAST_USERNAME_FIELD: "id:user_login"`.
+
+#### Choose the right selector
+
+Judicious choice of selector leads to a scan that is resilient to the application changing.
+
+In order of preference, it is recommended to choose as selectors:
+
+- `id` fields. These are generally unique on a page, and rarely change.
+- `name` fields. These are generally unique on a page, and rarely change.
+- `class` values specific to the field, such as the selector `"css:.username"` for the `username` class on the username field.
+- Presence of field specific data attributes, such as the selector, `"css:[data-username]"` when the `data-username` field has any value on the username field.
+- Multiple `class` hierarchy values, such as the selector `"css:.login-form .username"` when there are multiple elements with class `username` but only one nested inside the element with the class `login-form`.
+
+When using selectors to locate specific fields we recommend you avoid searching on:
+
+- Any `id`, `name`, `attribute`, `class` or `value` that is dynamically generated.
+- Generic class names, such as `column-10` and `dark-grey`.
+- XPath searches as they are less performant than other selector searches.
+- Unscoped searches, such as those beginning with `css:*` and `xpath://*`.
+
+### Bleeding-edge vulnerability definitions
+
+ZAP first creates rules in the `alpha` class. After a testing period with
+the community, they are promoted to `beta`. DAST uses `beta` definitions by
+default. To request `alpha` definitions, use the
+`DAST_INCLUDE_ALPHA_VULNERABILITIES` CI/CD variable as shown in the
+following configuration:
+
+```yaml
+include:
+ template: DAST.gitlab-ci.yml
+
+variables:
+ DAST_INCLUDE_ALPHA_VULNERABILITIES: "true"
+```
+
+### Cloning the project's repository
+
+The DAST job does not require the project's repository to be present when running, so by default
+[`GIT_STRATEGY`](../../../ci/runners/configure_runners.md#git-strategy) is set to `none`.
+
+## On-demand scans
+
+> - [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/218465) in GitLab 13.2.
+> - [Improved](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/218465) in GitLab 13.3.
+> - The saved scans feature was [introduced](https://gitlab.com/groups/gitlab-org/-/epics/5100) in GitLab 13.9.
+> - The option to select a branch was [introduced](https://gitlab.com/groups/gitlab-org/-/epics/4847) in GitLab 13.10.
+> - DAST branch selection [feature flag removed](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/322672) in GitLab 13.11.
+> - Auditing for DAST profile management was [introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/217872) in GitLab 14.1.
+
+An on-demand DAST scan runs outside the DevOps life cycle. Changes in your repository don't trigger
+the scan. You must either start it manually, or schedule it to run.
+
+An on-demand DAST scan:
+
+- Can run a specific combination of a [site profile](#site-profile) and a
+ [scanner profile](#scanner-profile).
+- Is associated with your project's default branch.
+- Is saved on creation so it can be run later.
+
+### On-demand scan modes
+
+An on-demand scan can be run in active or passive mode:
+
+- _Passive mode_ is the default and runs a ZAP Baseline Scan.
+- _Active mode_ runs a ZAP Full Scan which is potentially harmful to the site being scanned. To
+ minimize the risk of accidental damage, running an active scan requires a [validated site profile](#site-profile-validation).
+
+### View on-demand DAST scans
+
+To view running completed and scheduled on-demand DAST scans for a project, go to
+**Security & Compliance > On-demand Scans** in the left sidebar.
+
+- To view both running and completed scans, select **All**.
+- To view running scans only, select **Running**.
+- To view finished scans, select **Finished**. A finished scan is a scan that either succeeded,
+ failed, or was canceled.
+- To view scheduled scans, select **Scheduled**. It shows on-demand scans that have a schedule
+ set up. Those are _not_ included in the **All** tab.
+- To view saved on-demand scan profiles, select **Scan library**.
+ Those are _not_ included in the **All** tab.
+
+#### Cancel an on-demand scan
+
+To cancel a pending or running on-demand scan, select **Cancel** (**{cancel}**) in the
+on-demand scans list.
+
+#### Retry an on-demand scan
+
+To retry a scan that failed or succeeded with warnings, select **Retry** (**{retry}**) in the
+on-demand scans list.
+
+#### View an on-demand scan's results
+
+To view a finished scan's results, select **View results** in the on-demand scans list.
+
+#### Edit an on-demand scan
+
+To edit an on-demand scan's settings, select **Edit** (**{pencil}**) in the **Scheduled** tab.
+
+### Run an on-demand DAST scan
+
+Prerequisites:
+
+- You must have permission to run an on-demand DAST scan against a protected branch. The default
+ branch is automatically protected. For more information, read
+ [Pipeline security on protected branches](../../../ci/pipelines/index.md#pipeline-security-on-protected-branches).
+- A [scanner profile](#create-a-scanner-profile).
+- A [site profile](#create-a-site-profile).
+- If you are running an active scan the site profile must have been [validated](#validate-a-site-profile).
+
+You can run an on-demand scan immediately, once at a scheduled date and time or at a specified
+frequency:
+
+- Every day
+- Every week
+- Every month
+- Every 3 months
+- Every 6 months
+- Every year
+
+To run an on-demand scan immediately, either:
+
+- [Create and run an on-demand scan immediately](#create-and-run-an-on-demand-scan-immediately).
+- [Run a previously saved on-demand scan](#run-a-saved-on-demand-scan).
+
+To run an on-demand scan either at a scheduled date or frequency, read
+[Schedule an on-demand scan](#schedule-an-on-demand-scan).
+
+#### Create and run an on-demand scan immediately
+
+1. From your project's home page, go to **Security & Compliance > On-demand Scans** in the left
+ sidebar.
+1. Select **New scan**.
+1. Complete the **Scan name** and **Description** fields.
+1. In GitLab 13.10 and later, select the desired branch from the **Branch** dropdown list.
+1. In **Scanner profile**, select a scanner profile from the dropdown list.
+1. In **Site profile**, select a site profile from the dropdown list.
+1. To run the on-demand scan immediately, select **Save and run scan**. Otherwise, select
+ **Save scan** to [run](#run-a-saved-on-demand-scan) it later.
+
+The on-demand DAST scan runs and the project's dashboard shows the results.
+
+#### Run a saved on-demand scan
+
+To run a saved on-demand scan:
+
+1. On the top bar, select **Main menu > Projects** and find your project.
+1. On the left sidebar, select **Security & Compliance > On-demand Scans**.
+1. Select the **Scan library** tab.
+1. In the scan's row, select **Run scan**.
+
+ If the branch saved in the scan no longer exists, you must first
+ [edit the scan](#edit-an-on-demand-scan), select a new branch, and save the edited scan.
+
+The on-demand DAST scan runs, and the project's dashboard shows the results.
+
+#### Schedule an on-demand scan
+
+> - [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/328749) in GitLab 14.3. [Deployed behind the `dast_on_demand_scans_scheduler` flag](../../../administration/feature_flags.md), disabled by default.
+> - [Enabled on GitLab.com](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/328749) in GitLab 14.4.
+> - [Enabled on self-managed](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/328749) in GitLab 14.4.
+> - [Feature flag `dast_on_demand_scans_scheduler` removed](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/328749) in GitLab 14.5.
+
+To schedule a scan:
+
+1. On the top bar, select **Main menu > Projects** and find your project.
+1. On the left sidebar, select **Security & Compliance > On-demand Scans**.
+1. Select **New scan**.
+1. Complete the **Scan name** and **Description** text boxes.
+1. In GitLab 13.10 and later, from the **Branch** dropdown list, select the desired branch.
+1. In the **Scanner profile** section, from the dropdown list, select a scanner profile.
+1. In the **Site profile** section, from the dropdown list, select a site profile.
+1. Select **Schedule scan**.
+1. In the **Start time** section, select a time zone, date, and time.
+1. From the **Repeats** dropdown list, select your desired frequency:
+ - To run the scan once, select **Never**.
+ - For a recurring scan, select any other option.
+1. To run the on-demand scan immediately, select **Save and run scan**. To [run](#run-a-saved-on-demand-scan) it according to the schedule you set, select
+ **Save scan**.
+
+#### List saved on-demand scans
+
+To list saved on-demand scans:
+
+1. From your project's home page, go to **Security & Compliance > On-demand Scans**.
+1. Select the **Scan library** tab.
+
+#### View details of an on-demand scan
+
+To view details of an on-demand scan:
+
+1. From your project's home page, go to **Security & Compliance > On-demand Scans**.
+1. Select the **Scan library** tab.
+1. In the saved scan's row select **More actions** (**{ellipsis_v}**), then select **Edit**.
+
+#### Edit an on-demand scan
+
+To edit an on-demand scan:
+
+1. From your project's home page, go to **Security & Compliance > On-demand Scans**.
+1. Select the **Scan library** tab.
+1. In the saved scan's row select **More actions** (**{ellipsis_v}**), then select **Edit**.
+1. Edit the form.
+1. Select **Save scan**.
+
+#### Delete an on-demand scan
+
+To delete an on-demand scan:
+
+1. From your project's home page, go to **Security & Compliance > On-demand Scans**.
+1. Select the **Scan library** tab.
+1. In the saved scan's row select **More actions** (**{ellipsis_v}**), then select **Delete**.
+1. Select **Delete** to confirm the deletion.
+
+## Site profile
+
+> - Scan method [Enabled on GitLab.com and self-managed](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/345837) in GitLab 15.6.
+> - File URL [Enabled on GitLab.com and self-managed](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/345837) in GitLab 15.6.
+
+A site profile defines the attributes and configuration details of the deployed application,
+website, or API to be scanned by DAST. A site profile can be referenced in `.gitlab-ci.yml` and
+on-demand scans.
+
+A site profile contains:
+
+- **Profile name**: A name you assign to the site to be scanned. While a site profile is referenced
+ in either `.gitlab-ci.yml` or an on-demand scan, it **cannot** be renamed.
+- **Site type**: The type of target to be scanned, either website or API scan.
+- **Target URL**: The URL that DAST runs against.
+- **Excluded URLs**: A comma-separated list of URLs to exclude from the scan.
+- **Request headers**: A comma-separated list of HTTP request headers, including names and values. These headers are added to every request made by DAST.
+- **Authentication**:
+ - **Authenticated URL**: The URL of the page containing the sign-in HTML form on the target website. The username and password are submitted with the login form to create an authenticated scan.
+ - **Username**: The username used to authenticate to the website.
+ - **Password**: The password used to authenticate to the website.
+ - **Username form field**: The name of username field at the sign-in HTML form.
+ - **Password form field**: The name of password field at the sign-in HTML form.
+ - **Submit form field**: The `id` or `name` of the element that when selected submits the sign-in HTML form.
+
+- **Scan method**: A type of method to perform API testing. The supported methods are OpenAPI, Postman Collections, and HTTP Archive (HAR) documents.
+- **File URL**: The URL of the OpenAPI, Postman Collection, or HTTP Archive file.
+
+When an API site type is selected, a [host override](#host-override) is used to ensure the API being scanned is on the same host as the target. This is done to reduce the risk of running an active scan against the wrong API.
+
+When configured, request headers and password fields are encrypted using [`aes-256-gcm`](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Advanced_Encryption_Standard) before being stored in the database.
+This data can only be read and decrypted with a valid secrets file.
+
+### Site profile validation
+
+> - Site profile validation [introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/233020) in GitLab 13.8.
+> - Meta tag validation [introduced](https://gitlab.com/groups/gitlab-org/-/epics/6460) in GitLab 14.2.
+
+Site profile validation reduces the risk of running an active scan against the wrong website. A site
+must be validated before an active scan can run against it. The site validation methods are as
+follows:
+
+- _Text file validation_ requires a text file be uploaded to the target site. The text file is
+ allocated a name and content that is unique to the project. The validation process checks the
+ file's content.
+- _Header validation_ requires the header `Gitlab-On-Demand-DAST` be added to the target site,
+ with a value unique to the project. The validation process checks that the header is present, and
+ checks its value.
+- _Meta tag validation_ requires the meta tag named `gitlab-dast-validation` be added to the target site,
+ with a value unique to the project. Make sure it's added to the `<head>` section of the page. The validation process checks that the meta tag is present, and
+ checks its value.
+
+All these methods are equivalent in functionality. Use whichever is feasible.
+
+In [GitLab 14.2 and later](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/324990), site profile
+validation happens in a CI job using the [GitLab Runner](../../../ci/runners/index.md).
+
+### Create a site profile
+
+To create a site profile:
+
+1. From your project's home page, go to **Security & Compliance > Configuration**.
+1. Select **Manage** in the **DAST Profiles** row.
+1. Select **New > Site Profile**.
+1. Complete the fields then select **Save profile**.
+
+The site profile is created.
+
+### Edit a site profile
+
+If a site profile is linked to a security policy, a user cannot edit the profile from this page. See
+[Scan execution policies](../policies/scan-execution-policies.md)
+for more information.
+
+When a validated site profile's file, header, or meta tag is edited, the site's
+[validation status](#site-profile-validation) is revoked.
+
+To edit a site profile:
+
+1. From your project's home page, go to **Security & Compliance > Configuration**.
+1. In the **DAST Profiles** row select **Manage**.
+1. Select the **Site Profiles** tab.
+1. In the profile's row select the **More actions** (**{ellipsis_v}**) menu, then select **Edit**.
+1. Edit the fields then select **Save profile**.
+
+### Delete a site profile
+
+If a site profile is linked to a security policy, a user cannot delete the profile from this page.
+See [Scan execution policies](../policies/scan-execution-policies.md)
+for more information.
+
+To delete a site profile:
+
+1. From your project's home page, go to **Security & Compliance > Configuration**.
+1. In the **DAST Profiles** row select **Manage**.
+1. Select the **Site Profiles** tab.
+1. In the profile's row, select the **More actions** (**{ellipsis_v}**) menu, then select **Delete**.
+1. Select **Delete** to confirm the deletion.
+
+### Validate a site profile
+
+Validating a site is required to run an active scan.
+
+To validate a site profile:
+
+1. On the top bar, select **Main menu > Projects** and find your project.
+1. On the left sidebar, select **Security & Compliance > Configuration**.
+1. In the **Dynamic Application Security Testing (DAST)** section, select **Manage profiles**.
+1. Select the **Site Profiles** tab.
+1. In the profile's row, select **Validate**.
+1. Select the validation method.
+ 1. For **Text file validation**:
+ 1. Download the validation file listed in **Step 2**.
+ 1. Upload the validation file to the host, to the location in **Step 3** or any location you
+ prefer.
+ 1. If required, edit the file location in **Step 3**.
+ 1. Select **Validate**.
+ 1. For **Header validation**:
+ 1. Select the clipboard icon in **Step 2**.
+ 1. Edit the header of the site to validate, and paste the clipboard content.
+ 1. Select the input field in **Step 3** and enter the location of the header.
+ 1. Select **Validate**.
+ 1. For **Meta tag validation**:
+ 1. Select the clipboard icon in **Step 2**.
+ 1. Edit the content of the site to validate, and paste the clipboard content.
+ 1. Select the input field in **Step 3** and enter the location of the meta tag.
+ 1. Select **Validate**.
+
+The site is validated and an active scan can run against it. A site profile's validation status is
+revoked only when it's revoked manually, or its file, header, or meta tag is edited.
+
+### Retry a failed validation
+
+> - [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/322609) in GitLab 14.3.
+> - [Deployed behind the `dast_failed_site_validations` flag](../../../administration/feature_flags.md), enabled by default.
+> - [Feature flag `dast_failed_site_validations` removed](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/323961) in GitLab 14.4.
+
+Failed site validation attempts are listed on the **Site profiles** tab of the **Manage profiles**
+page.
+
+To retry a site profile's failed validation:
+
+1. On the top bar, select **Main menu > Projects** and find your project.
+1. On the left sidebar, select **Security & Compliance > Configuration**.
+1. In the **Dynamic Application Security Testing (DAST)** section, select **Manage profiles**.
+1. Select the **Site Profiles** tab.
+1. In the profile's row, select **Retry validation**.
+
+### Revoke a site profile's validation status
+
+WARNING:
+When a site profile's validation status is revoked, all site profiles that share the same URL also
+have their validation status revoked.
+
+To revoke a site profile's validation status:
+
+1. From your project's home page, go to **Security & Compliance > Configuration**.
+1. In the **DAST Profiles** row select **Manage**.
+1. Beside the validated profile, select **Revoke validation**.
+
+The site profile's validation status is revoked.
+
+### Validated site profile headers
+
+The following are code samples of how you can provide the required site profile header in your
+application.
+
+#### Ruby on Rails example for on-demand scan
+
+Here's how you can add a custom header in a Ruby on Rails application:
+
+```ruby
+class DastWebsiteTargetController < ActionController::Base
+ def dast_website_target
+ response.headers['Gitlab-On-Demand-DAST'] = '0dd79c9a-7b29-4e26-a815-eaaf53fcab1c'
+ head :ok
+ end
+end
+```
+
+#### Django example for on-demand scan
+
+Here's how you can add a
+[custom header in Django](https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/2.2/ref/request-response/#setting-header-fields):
+
+```python
+class DastWebsiteTargetView(View):
+ def head(self, *args, **kwargs):
+ response = HttpResponse()
+ response['Gitlab-On-Demand-DAST'] = '0dd79c9a-7b29-4e26-a815-eaaf53fcab1c'
+
+ return response
+```
+
+#### Node (with Express) example for on-demand scan
+
+Here's how you can add a
+[custom header in Node (with Express)](https://expressjs.com/en/5x/api.html#res.append):
+
+```javascript
+app.get('/dast-website-target', function(req, res) {
+ res.append('Gitlab-On-Demand-DAST', '0dd79c9a-7b29-4e26-a815-eaaf53fcab1c')
+ res.send('Respond to DAST ping')
+})
+```
+
+## Scanner profile
+
+> - [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/222767) in GitLab 13.4.
+> - [Added](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/225804) in GitLab 13.5: scan mode, AJAX spider, debug messages.
+
+A scanner profile defines the configuration details of a security scanner. A scanner profile can be
+referenced in `.gitlab-ci.yml` and on-demand scans.
+
+A scanner profile contains:
+
+- **Profile name:** A name you give the scanner profile. For example, "Spider_15". While a scanner
+ profile is referenced in either `.gitlab-ci.yml` or an on-demand scan, it **cannot** be renamed.
+- **Scan mode:** A passive scan monitors all HTTP messages (requests and responses) sent to the target. An active scan attacks the target to find potential vulnerabilities.
+- **Spider timeout:** The maximum number of minutes allowed for the spider to traverse the site.
+- **Target timeout:** The maximum number of seconds DAST waits for the site to be available before
+ starting the scan.
+- **AJAX spider:** Run the AJAX spider, in addition to the traditional spider, to crawl the target site.
+- **Debug messages:** Include debug messages in the DAST console output.
+
+### Create a scanner profile
+
+To create a scanner profile:
+
+1. From your project's home page, go to **Security & Compliance > Configuration**.
+1. In the **DAST Profiles** row, select **Manage**.
+1. Select **New > Scanner Profile**.
+1. Complete the form. For details of each field, see [Scanner profile](#scanner-profile).
+1. Select **Save profile**.
+
+### Edit a scanner profile
+
+If a scanner profile is linked to a security policy, a user cannot edit the profile from this page.
+See [Scan execution policies](../policies/scan-execution-policies.md)
+for more information.
+
+To edit a scanner profile:
+
+1. From your project's home page, go to **Security & Compliance > Configuration**.
+1. In the **DAST Profiles** row, select **Manage**.
+1. Select the **Scanner Profiles** tab.
+1. In the scanner's row, select the **More actions** (**{ellipsis_v}**) menu, then select **Edit**.
+1. Edit the form.
+1. Select **Save profile**.
+
+### Delete a scanner profile
+
+If a scanner profile is linked to a security policy, a user cannot delete the profile from this
+page. See [Scan execution policies](../policies/scan-execution-policies.md)
+for more information.
+
+To delete a scanner profile:
+
+1. From your project's home page, go to **Security & Compliance > Configuration**.
+1. In the **DAST Profiles** row, select **Manage**.
+1. Select the **Scanner Profiles** tab.
+1. In the scanner's row, select the **More actions** (**{ellipsis_v}**) menu, then select **Delete**.
+1. Select **Delete**.
+
+## Auditing
+
+> [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/217872) in GitLab 14.1.
+
+The creation, updating, and deletion of DAST profiles, DAST scanner profiles,
+and DAST site profiles are included in the [audit log](../../../administration/audit_events.md).
+
+## Reports
+
+The DAST tool outputs a `gl-dast-report.json` report file containing details of the scan and its results.
+This file is included in the job's artifacts. JSON is the default format, but
+you can output the report in Markdown, HTML, and XML formats. To specify an alternative
+format, use a [CI/CD variable](#available-cicd-variables). You can also use a CI/CD variable
+to configure the job to output the `gl-dast-debug-auth-report.html` file which helps when debugging
+authentication issues.
+
+For details of the report's schema, see the [schema for DAST reports](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/security-products/security-report-schemas/-/blob/master/dist/dast-report-format.json). Example reports can be found in the
+[DAST repository](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/security-products/dast/-/tree/main/test/end-to-end/expect).
+
+WARNING:
+The JSON report artifacts are not a public API of DAST and their format is expected to change in the
+future.
diff --git a/doc/user/application_security/dast_api/index.md b/doc/user/application_security/dast_api/index.md
index 733ec3373d2..d77be0f0ca9 100644
--- a/doc/user/application_security/dast_api/index.md
+++ b/doc/user/application_security/dast_api/index.md
@@ -7,10 +7,12 @@ type: reference, howto
# DAST API **(ULTIMATE)**
+> DAST API analyzer [became the default analyzer for on-demand DAST API scans](https://gitlab.com/groups/gitlab-org/-/epics/4254) in GitLab 15.6.
+
Perform Dynamic Application Security Testing (DAST) of web APIs to help discover bugs and potential
security issues that other QA processes may miss. Use DAST API tests in addition to
[GitLab Secure](../index.md)'s other security scanners and your own test processes. You can run DAST
-API tests either as part your CI/CD workflow, [on-demand](../dast/index.md#on-demand-scans), or both.
+API tests either as part your CI/CD workflow, [on-demand](../dast/proxy-based.md#on-demand-scans), or both.
WARNING:
Do not run DAST API testing against a production server. Not only can it perform _any_ function that
diff --git a/doc/user/application_security/index.md b/doc/user/application_security/index.md
index f58c146f773..5ddfa99fc81 100644
--- a/doc/user/application_security/index.md
+++ b/doc/user/application_security/index.md
@@ -403,7 +403,7 @@ Learn more on overriding security jobs:
- [Overriding Dependency Scanning jobs](dependency_scanning/index.md#overriding-dependency-scanning-jobs).
- [Overriding Container Scanning jobs](container_scanning/index.md#overriding-the-container-scanning-template).
- [Overriding Secret Detection jobs](secret_detection/index.md#configure-scan-settings).
-- [Overriding DAST jobs](dast/index.md#customize-dast-settings).
+- [Overriding DAST jobs](dast/proxy-based.md#customize-dast-settings).
- [Overriding License Compliance jobs](../compliance/license_compliance/index.md#overriding-the-template).
All the security scanning tools define their stage, so this error can occur with all of them.
diff --git a/doc/user/application_security/policies/scan-execution-policies.md b/doc/user/application_security/policies/scan-execution-policies.md
index 49155d8a69f..f950d5116b1 100644
--- a/doc/user/application_security/policies/scan-execution-policies.md
+++ b/doc/user/application_security/policies/scan-execution-policies.md
@@ -130,13 +130,13 @@ rule in the defined policy are met.
| Field | Type | Possible values | Description |
|-------|------|-----------------|-------------|
| `scan` | `string` | `dast`, `secret_detection`, `sast`, `container_scanning`, `dependency_scanning` | The action's type. |
-| `site_profile` | `string` | Name of the selected [DAST site profile](../dast/index.md#site-profile). | The DAST site profile to execute the DAST scan. This field should only be set if `scan` type is `dast`. |
-| `scanner_profile` | `string` or `null` | Name of the selected [DAST scanner profile](../dast/index.md#scanner-profile). | The DAST scanner profile to execute the DAST scan. This field should only be set if `scan` type is `dast`.|
+| `site_profile` | `string` | Name of the selected [DAST site profile](../dast/proxy-based.md#site-profile). | The DAST site profile to execute the DAST scan. This field should only be set if `scan` type is `dast`. |
+| `scanner_profile` | `string` or `null` | Name of the selected [DAST scanner profile](../dast/proxy-based.md#scanner-profile). | The DAST scanner profile to execute the DAST scan. This field should only be set if `scan` type is `dast`.|
| `variables` | `object` | | A set of CI variables, supplied as an array of `key: value` pairs, to apply and enforce for the selected scan. The `key` is the variable name, with its `value` provided as a string. This parameter supports any variable that the GitLab CI job supports for the specified scan. |
Note the following:
-- You must create the [site profile](../dast/index.md#site-profile) and [scanner profile](../dast/index.md#scanner-profile)
+- You must create the [site profile](../dast/proxy-based.md#site-profile) and [scanner profile](../dast/proxy-based.md#scanner-profile)
with selected names for each project that is assigned to the selected Security Policy Project.
Otherwise, the policy is not applied and a job with an error message is created instead.
- Once you associate the site profile and scanner profile by name in the policy, it is not possible
@@ -152,7 +152,7 @@ Note the following:
mode when executed as part of a scheduled scan.
- A container scanning scan that is configured for the `pipeline` rule type ignores the agent defined in the `agents` object. The `agents` object is only considered for `schedule` rule types.
An agent with a name provided in the `agents` object must be created and configured for the project.
-- The Depndency Scanning and SAST scans use the default templates and run in a [child pipeline](../../../ci/pipelines/downstream_pipelines.md#parent-child-pipelines).
+- The Dependency Scanning and SAST scans use the default templates and run in a [child pipeline](../../../ci/pipelines/downstream_pipelines.md#parent-child-pipelines).
## Example security policies project
diff --git a/doc/user/permissions.md b/doc/user/permissions.md
index 5ec1faed7c4..8e152a8c190 100644
--- a/doc/user/permissions.md
+++ b/doc/user/permissions.md
@@ -64,7 +64,7 @@ The following table lists project permissions available for each role:
| [Analytics](analytics/index.md):<br>View [code review analytics](analytics/code_review_analytics.md) | | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
| [Analytics](analytics/index.md):<br>View [repository analytics](analytics/repository_analytics.md) | | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
| [Application security](application_security/index.md):<br>View licenses in [dependency list](application_security/dependency_list/index.md) | | | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
-| [Application security](application_security/index.md):<br>Create and run [on-demand DAST scans](application_security/dast/index.md#on-demand-scans) | | | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
+| [Application security](application_security/index.md):<br>Create and run [on-demand DAST scans](application_security/dast/proxy-based.md#on-demand-scans) | | | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
| [Application security](application_security/index.md):<br>Manage [security policy](application_security/policies/index.md) | | | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
| [Application security](application_security/index.md):<br>View [dependency list](application_security/dependency_list/index.md) | | | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
| [Application security](application_security/index.md):<br>Create a [CVE ID Request](application_security/cve_id_request.md) | | | | ✓ | ✓ |
diff --git a/doc/user/project/integrations/slack.md b/doc/user/project/integrations/slack.md
index fd40b725598..d34c558ebbc 100644
--- a/doc/user/project/integrations/slack.md
+++ b/doc/user/project/integrations/slack.md
@@ -15,7 +15,7 @@ to control GitLab from Slack. Slash commands are configured separately.
## Configure Slack
-1. Sign in to your Slack team and [start a new Incoming WebHooks configuration](https://api.slack.com/messaging/webhooks#getting_started).
+1. Sign in to your Slack team and [start a new Incoming WebHooks configuration](https://my.slack.com/services/new/incoming-webhook).
1. Identify the Slack channel where notifications should be sent to by default.
Select **Add Incoming WebHooks integration** to add the configuration.
1. Copy the **Webhook URL** to use later when you configure GitLab.