Highlights from Git 2.37
The open source Git project just released Git 2.37. Take a look at some of our highlights from the latest release.
The open source Git project just released Git 2.37. Take a look at some of our highlights from the latest release.
You can now get more transparency and control over dependency caching in your actions workflows. Actions users who use actions/cache to make jobs faster on GitHub Actions can now use…
Expand the completeness of your dependency graph by using the dependency submission API, which will create more comprehensive alerts on supply chain vulnerabilities
In this post I’ll exploit CVE-2022-22057, a use-after-free in the Qualcomm gpu kernel driver, to gain root and disable SELinux from the untrusted app sandbox on a Samsung Z flip 3. I’ll look at various mitigations that are implemented on modern Android devices and how they affect the exploit.
How to interview for skill, not spare time.
In May, we experienced three distinct incidents resulting in significant impact to multiple services across GitHub.com. This report also sheds light into the billing incident that impacted Actions and Codespaces users in April.
GitHub Enterprise Server 3.5 is available now, including access to the Container registry, the addition of Dependabot, enhanced administrator capabilities, and features for GitHub Advanced Security.
Each month, we highlight open source projects that have shipped major updates. These include everything from world-changing technology to developer tooling, and weekend projects. Here are our top staff picks…
Introduction Open Sauced, GitHub’s Explore page, Hacktoberfest, and First Timers Only help folks discover open source projects. This monthly series–Open Source Monthly—will add to these efforts by helping: First-time contributors…
You can now output and group custom Markdown content on the Actions run summary page.
This is the first post in a two-part series describing friendly forks and alternative strategies for managing them. Stay tuned for part two coming in May!
Introducing CodeQL packs to help you codify and share your knowledge of vulnerabilities.
On April 12, GitHub Security began an investigation that uncovered evidence that an attacker abused stolen OAuth user tokens issued to two third-party OAuth integrators, Heroku and Travis-CI, to download data from dozens of organizations, including npm. Read on to learn more about the impact to GitHub, npm, and our users.
Ensuring secure access to your source code is more important than ever. Git Credential Manager helps make that easy.
The new dependency review action and API prevents the introduction of known supply chain vulnerabilities into your code.
From automating builds and releases to taking care of large-scale regression testing, here are a few ways we use GitHub Actions to build GitHub.
We believe our technical interviews should be as similar as possible to the way we work at GitHub.
Advice on fundamentals, picking languages to learn, social media presence, interviewing, and more
Over the past few weeks, we have experienced multiple incidents due to the health of our database. We wanted to share what we know about these incidents while our team continues to address them.
If there’s one habit that can make software more secure, it’s probably input validation. Here’s how to apply OWASP Proactive Control C5 (Validate All Inputs) to your code.
GitHub secret scanning protects users by searching repositories for known types of secrets. By identifying and flagging these secrets we help protect users from data leaks and fraud associated with…
Build what’s next on GitHub, the place for anyone from anywhere to build anything.
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