Conversation
|
| GitGuardian id | GitGuardian status | Secret | Commit | Filename | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 9441144 | Triggered | Generic High Entropy Secret | 64a5bf9 | releases/do-operator-v0.1.13.yaml | View secret |
🛠 Guidelines to remediate hardcoded secrets
- Understand the implications of revoking this secret by investigating where it is used in your code.
- Replace and store your secret safely. Learn here the best practices.
- Revoke and rotate this secret.
- If possible, rewrite git history. Rewriting git history is not a trivial act. You might completely break other contributing developers' workflow and you risk accidentally deleting legitimate data.
To avoid such incidents in the future consider
- following these best practices for managing and storing secrets including API keys and other credentials
- install secret detection on pre-commit to catch secret before it leaves your machine and ease remediation.
🦉 GitGuardian detects secrets in your source code to help developers and security teams secure the modern development process. You are seeing this because you or someone else with access to this repository has authorized GitGuardian to scan your pull request.
d-honeybadger
left a comment
There was a problem hiding this comment.
v1.33.0 files shouldn't be here... and the yaml-e one for 0.1.13 too - do you know where it's coming from?
Its probably because I used the version 1.33.0 first and later on switched to the correct version. I would fix it |
a1f29ee to
3cc38d8
Compare
3cc38d8 to
64a5bf9
Compare
No description provided.