Better collaboration between teams, faster time to market, improved overall productivity and enhanced customer satisfaction are just some of the benefits you can reap from successful DevSecOps.
However, it’s not just a matter of wrapping a few security tool APIs into your favourite CI tool and calling it a day. DevSecOps programs and tooling grow and mature, as new tools are added, teams come onboard and processes update. You don’t want to clog up and confuse your CI/CD pipelines with constant changes to accommodate DevSecOps.
There’s no ‘one-size-fits-all’ process for DevSecOps and we recognise every company will be at different stages. Here are some essential considerations to start with.
- Make security part of the software development workflow
- Automation, automation, automation
- Finding your balance with automated security
MAKE SECURITY PART OF THE SOFTWARE DEVELOPMENT WORKFLOW
DevSecOps unites developers and security professionals, cultivating an environment of collaboration. But it’s hard to ignore that a certain level of friction has always existed.
Besides time, there are lots of things that naturally place pressure on the CI/CD pipeline when it comes to security:
- Hooking in all the relevant security tools (APIs, docker, CLIs, etc)
- Collecting, understanding and processing the results from all of these tools so you don’t just throw every vulnerability back to the development team
- Prioritising which security issues to report on and which are not important
- Communicating issues where they’re needed through channels like Slack, Jira, and others
- Making any automated go/no-go decisions based on the security results. Are there big issues that need to be fixed before deployment?
- Handling tool extensions and keeping new versions up to date
- Recording security metrics to tell the full pipeline story
In one corner you have the development team and in the other, security. Both sometimes think what the other team does create nothing but work for each other. This perspective results in both teams working in silos, which defeats the main principle of DevSecOps.
Making security part of the workflow simply starts with a mindset change, which is easier said than done. DevOps teams spend their time improving and refining their pipelines based on the needs of the teams around them. Now, with DevSecOps, security teams are joining the party with requirements that aren’t as straightforward.
Security controls and tests need to be embedded early and often in the development lifecycle. With organisations potentially pushing new versions of code into production 60+ times per day, automated security is the answer.
If you believe increased security slows things down and creates a barrier to innovation, we’re here to dispel that. We understand your reluctance, but it’s just not the case when you have automation on your side paired with a platform that eases the job of adding DevSecOps to the CI/CD pipeline.
AUTOMATION, AUTOMATION, AUTOMATION
It’s not news to anybody that automation is a key characteristic in DevSecOps. For security to keep pace with code delivery in a CI/CD environment, automation of security is a given.
Organisations, where developers push code to production multiple times a day, will feel this more than anybody. Rapid and secure code delivery may sound like an oxymoron to most businesses. But DevSecOps aspires to change that.
Trying to run automated scans on your entire application source code each day can be time-consuming and hinder your ability to keep up with daily changes. So, before delving into a tool stack head first, tread carefully.
Teams responsible for application security can now use pioneering platforms to set the tool and test configuration as well as collect and consolidate reporting data to various other tools - all without changing the DevOps pipeline. This gives security maximum flexibility to make the changes they need to, without needing permissions for DevOps.
For added simplicity, we can use the Uleska Platform as an example for ease. The short API logic Uleska uses to run security testing is consistent for every project. This means regardless of the project logic or the CI/CD system being used, the same template can be used. Not only does it ease the job of adding DevSecOps to the CI/CD pipeline but it makes it quicker and easier for security changes to be made since they’re configured outside the main CI/CD logic.
FINDING YOUR BALANCE WITH AUTOMATED SECURITY
Doing DevSecOps right is a fine balance. If it’s approached as a simple automation task, it’s likely to result in clunky connections to an ever growing list of security tools, as well as large lists of security issues being thrown back at developers - and more delays to code being released. As if everybody didn’t already have enough on their plate?
DevSecOps processes in many companies are immature, but maturing. This means the tech, tools and processes are continually evolving as improvements are being made.
However, if this logic is based within the CI/CD pipeline, this results in continual requests to update the pipeline logic. Given there are already lots of pipeline requests and changes going on for other reasons, this means security has to compete for time, resources and capacity.
Although there’s a good case for saying the CI/CD pipeline isn’t the place to hold the logic or code to do DevSecOps, but if not there, where would it live? This is the reason the Uleska Platform has separated the setup and configuration of DevSecOps away from the core CI/CD pipeline, whilst still being driven by it.
At the heart of it all, security products need to integrate into the development pipeline and enable both the development and security team to work together instead of just throwing things over the fence to each other.
Many of the tools required to insert security into agile DevOps are still emerging. As the methodology matures, you need a reliable platform that can scale with you, making it easy for you to adopt new tools, ways of working and to onboard new teams and applications.
OVERCOMING CHALLENGES TO UNIFY DEVOPS AND SECURITY
Eliminating manual security tasks by hooking end-to-end security automation into your CI/CD sounds like no easy feat - and you’re right. There are many challenges that may crop up on your journey to releasing faster, more secure code.
That’s why we’ve provided practical guidance for software security teams looking to save time when scanning and testing software - all without slowing down the delivery. Download your guide today to prepare for the security challenges your team might come up against.
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