Troubleshooting
API Fuzzing job times out after N hours
For larger repositories, the API Fuzzing job could time out on the small hosted runner on Linux, which is set per default. If this happens in your jobs, you should scale up to a larger runner.
See the following documentation sections for assistance:
- Performance tuning and testing speed
- Using a larger Runner
- Excluding operations by path
- Excluding slow operations
API Fuzzing job takes too long to complete
See Performance Tuning and Testing Speed
Error waiting for API Fuzzing 'http://127.0.0.1:5000' to become available
Error: A bug exists in versions of the API Fuzzing analyzer prior to v1.6.196 that can cause a background process to fail under certain conditions. The solution is to update to a newer version of the API Fuzzing analyzer.
The version information can be found in the job details for the apifuzzer_fuzz
job.
If the issue is occurring with versions v1.6.196 or greater, contact Support and provide the following information:
- Reference this troubleshooting section and ask for the issue to be escalated to the Dynamic Analysis Team.
- The full console output of the job.
- The
gl-api-security-scanner.log
file available as a job artifact. In the right-hand panel of the job details page, select the Browse button. - The
apifuzzer_fuzz
job definition from your.gitlab-ci.yml
file.
Error message
- In GitLab 15.6 and later,
Error waiting for API Fuzzing 'http://127.0.0.1:5000' to become available
- In GitLab 15.5 and earlier,
Error waiting for API Security 'http://127.0.0.1:5000' to become available
.
Failed to start session with scanner. Please retry, and if the problem persists reach out to support.
The API Fuzzing engine outputs an error message when it cannot establish a connection with the scanner application component. The error message is shown in the job output window of the apifuzzer_fuzz
job. A common cause for this issue is that the background component cannot use the selected port as it's already in use. This error can occur intermittently if timing plays a part (race condition). This issue occurs most often with Kubernetes environments when other services are mapped into the container causing port conflicts.
Before proceeding with a solution, it is important to confirm that the error message was produced because the port was already taken. To confirm this was the cause:
-
Go to the job console.
-
Look for the artifact
gl-api-security-scanner.log
. You can either download all artifacts by selecting Download and then search for the file, or directly start searching by selecting Browse. -
Open the file
gl-api-security-scanner.log
in a text editor. -
If the error message was produced because the port was already taken, you should see in the file a message like the following:
-
Failed to bind to address http://127.0.0.1:5500: address already in use.
-
In GitLab 15.4 and earlier:
Failed to bind to address http://[::]:5000: address already in use.
The text http://[::]:5000
in the previous message could be different in your case, for instance it could be http://[::]:5500
or http://127.0.0.1:5500
. As long as the remaining parts of the error message are the same, it is safe to assume the port was already taken.
If you did not find evidence that the port was already taken, check other troubleshooting sections which also address the same error message shown in the job console output. If there are no more options, feel free to get support or request an improvement through the proper channels.
Once you have confirmed the issue was produced because the port was already taken. Then, GitLab 15.5 and later introduced the configuration variable FUZZAPI_API_PORT
. This configuration variable allows setting a fixed port number for the scanner background component.
Solution
- Ensure your
.gitlab-ci.yml
file defines the configuration variableFUZZAPI_API_PORT
. - Update the value of
FUZZAPI_API_PORT
to any available port number greater than 1024. We recommend checking that the new value is not in used by GitLab. See the full list of ports used by GitLab in Package defaults
Errors were found during validation of the document using the published OpenAPI schema
Error: At the start of an API Fuzzing job the OpenAPI Specification is validated against the published schema. This error is shown when the provided OpenAPI Specification has validation errors:
Error, the OpenAPI document is not valid.
Errors were found during validation of the document using the published OpenAPI schema
Errors can be introduced when creating an OpenAPI Specification manually, and also when the schema is generated.
For OpenAPI Specifications that are generated automatically validation errors are often the result of missing code annotations.
Error message
-
Error, the OpenAPI document is not valid. Errors were found during validation of the document using the published OpenAPI schema
OpenAPI 2.0 schema validation error ...
OpenAPI 3.0.x schema validation error ...
Solution
For generated OpenAPI Specifications
- Identify the validation errors.
- Use the Swagger Editor to identify validation problems in your specification. The visual nature of the Swagger Editor makes it easier to understand what needs to change.
- Alternatively, you can check the log output and look for schema validation warnings. They are prefixed with messages such as
OpenAPI 2.0 schema validation error
orOpenAPI 3.0.x schema validation error
. Each failed validation provides extra information aboutlocation
anddescription
. JSON Schema validation messages can be complex, and editors can help you validate schema documents.
- Review the documentation for the OpenAPI generation your framework/tech stack is using. Identify the changes needed to produce a correct OpenAPI document.
- After the validation issues are resolved, re-run your pipeline.
For manually created OpenAPI Specifications
- Identify the validation errors.
- The simplest solution is to use a visual tool to edit and validate the OpenAPI document. For example the Swagger Editor highlights schema errors and possible solutions.
- Alternatively, you can check the log output and look for schema validation warnings. They are prefixed with messages such as
OpenAPI 2.0 schema validation error
orOpenAPI 3.0.x schema validation error
. Each failed validation provides extra information aboutlocation
anddescription
. Correct each of the validation failures and then resubmit the OpenAPI doc. JSON Schema validation messages can be complex, and editors can help you validate schema documents.
- After the validation issues are resolved, re-run your pipeline.
Failed to start scanner session (version header not found)
The API Fuzzing engine outputs an error message when it cannot establish a connection with the scanner application component. The error message is shown in the job output window of the apifuzzer_fuzz
job. A common cause of this issue is changing the FUZZAPI_API
variable from its default.
Error message
Failed to start scanner session (version header not found).
Solution
- Remove the
FUZZAPI_API
variable from the.gitlab-ci.yml
file. The value is inherited from the API Fuzzing CI/CD template. We recommend this method instead of manually setting a value. - If removing the variable is not possible, check to see if this value has changed in the latest version of the API Fuzzing CI/CD template. If so, update the value in the
.gitlab-ci.yml
file.
Application cannot determine the base URL for the target API
The API Fuzzing analyzer outputs an error message when it cannot determine the target API after inspecting the OpenAPI document. This error message is shown when the target API has not been set in the .gitlab-ci.yml
file, it is not available in the environment_url.txt
file, and it could not be computed using the OpenAPI document.
There is an order of precedence in which the API Fuzzing analyzer tries to get the target API when checking the different sources. First, it tries to use the FUZZAPI_TARGET_URL
. If the environment variable has not been set, then the API Fuzzing analyzer attempts to use the environment_url.txt
file. If there is no file environment_url.txt
, the API Fuzzing analyzer now uses the OpenAPI document contents and the URL provided in FUZZAPI_OPENAPI
(if a URL is provided) to try to compute the target API.
The best-suited solution depends on whether or not your target API changes for each deployment:
- If the target API is the same for each deployment (a static environment), use the static environment solution.
- If the target API changes for each deployment, use a dynamic environment solution.
Static environment solution
This solution is for pipelines in which the target API URL doesn't change (is static).
Add environmental variable
For environments where the target API remains the same, we recommend you specify the target URL by using the FUZZAPI_TARGET_URL
environment variable. In your .gitlab-ci.yml
file, add a variable FUZZAPI_TARGET_URL
. The variable must be set to the base URL of API testing target. For example:
stages:
- fuzz
include:
- template: API-Fuzzing.gitlab-ci.yml
variables:
FUZZAPI_TARGET_URL: http://test-deployment/
FUZZAPI_OPENAPI: test-api-specification.json
Dynamic environment solutions
In a dynamic environment your target API changes for each different deployment. In this case, there is more than one possible solution, we recommend to use the environment_url.txt
file when dealing with dynamic environments.
Use environment_url.txt
To support dynamic environments in which the target API URL changes during each pipeline, API Fuzzing supports the use of an environment_url.txt
file that contains the URL to use. This file is not checked into the repository, instead it's created during the pipeline by the job that deploys the test target and collected as an artifact that can be used by later jobs in the pipeline. The job that creates the environment_url.txt
file must run before the API Fuzzing job.
- Modify the test target deployment job adding the base URL in an
environment_url.txt
file at the root of your project. - Modify the test target deployment job collecting the
environment_url.txt
as an artifact.
Example:
deploy-test-target:
script:
# Perform deployment steps
# Create environment_url.txt (example)
- echo http://${CI_PROJECT_ID}-${CI_ENVIRONMENT_SLUG}.example.org > environment_url.txt
artifacts:
paths:
- environment_url.txt
Use OpenAPI with an invalid schema
There are cases where the document is autogenerated with an invalid schema or cannot be edited manually in a timely manner. In those scenarios, the API Fuzzing is able to perform a relaxed validation by setting the variable FUZZAPI_OPENAPI_RELAXED_VALIDATION
. We recommend providing a fully compliant OpenAPI document to prevent unexpected behaviors.
Edit a non-compliant OpenAPI file
To detect and correct elements that don't comply with the OpenAPI specifications, we recommend using an editor. An editor commonly provides document validation, and suggestions to create a schema-compliant OpenAPI document. Suggested editors include:
Editor | OpenAPI 2.0 | OpenAPI 3.0.x | OpenAPI 3.1.x |
---|---|---|---|
Swagger Editor | {check-circle} YAML, JSON | {check-circle} YAML, JSON | {dotted-circle} YAML, JSON |
Stoplight Studio | {check-circle} YAML, JSON | {check-circle} YAML, JSON | {check-circle} YAML, JSON |
If your OpenAPI document is generated manually, load your document in the editor and fix anything that is non-compliant. If your document is generated automatically, load it in your editor to identify the issues in the schema, then go to the application and perform the corrections based on the framework you are using.
Enable OpenAPI relaxed validation
Relaxed validation is meant for cases when the OpenAPI document cannot meet OpenAPI specifications, but it still has enough content to be consumed by different tools. A validation is performed but less strictly in regards to document schema.
API Fuzzing can still try to consume an OpenAPI document that does not fully comply with OpenAPI specifications. To instruct API Fuzzing analyzer to perform a relaxed validation, set the variable FUZZAPI_OPENAPI_RELAXED_VALIDATION
to any value, for example:
stages:
- fuzz
include:
- template: API-Fuzzing.gitlab-ci.yml
variables:
FUZZAPI_PROFILE: Quick-10
FUZZAPI_TARGET_URL: http://test-deployment/
FUZZAPI_OPENAPI: test-api-specification.json
FUZZAPI_OPENAPI_RELAXED_VALIDATION: 'On'
No operation in the OpenAPI document is consuming any supported media type
API Fuzzing uses the specified media types in the OpenAPI document to generate requests. If no request can be created due to the lack of supported media types, then an error is thrown.
Error message
Error, no operation in the OpenApi document is consuming any supported media type. Check 'OpenAPI Specification' to check the supported media types.
Solution
- Review the supported media types in the OpenAPI Specification section.
- Edit your OpenAPI document, allowing at least a given operation to accept any of the supported media types. Alternatively, a supported media type could be set in the OpenAPI document level and get applied to all operations. This step may require changes in your application to ensure the supported media type is accepted by the application.
The SSL connection could not be established, see inner exception.
Error: API fuzzing is compatible with a broad range of TLS configurations, including outdated protocols and ciphers. Despite broad support, you might encounter connection errors, like this:
Error, error occurred trying to download `<URL>`:
There was an error when retrieving content from Uri:' <URL>'.
Error:The SSL connection could not be established, see inner exception.
This error occurs because API fuzzing could not establish a secure connection with the server at the given URL.
To resolve the issue:
If the host in the error message supports non-TLS connections, change https://
to http://
in your configuration.
For example, if an error occurs with the following configuration:
stages:
- fuzz
include:
- template: API-Fuzzing.gitlab-ci.yml
variables:
FUZZAPI_TARGET_URL: https://test-deployment/
FUZZAPI_OPENAPI: https://specs/openapi.json
Change the prefix of FUZZAPI_OPENAPI
from https://
to http://
:
stages:
- fuzz
include:
- template: API-Fuzzing.gitlab-ci.yml
variables:
FUZZAPI_TARGET_URL: https://test-deployment/
FUZZAPI_OPENAPI: http://specs/openapi.json
If you cannot use a non-TLS connection to access the URL, contact the Support team for help.
You can expedite the investigation with the testssl.sh tool. From a machine with a bash shell and connectivity to the affected server:
- Download the latest release
zip
ortar.gz
file and extract from https://github.com/drwetter/testssl.sh/releases. - Run
./testssl.sh --log https://specs
. - Attach the log file to your support ticket.
ERROR: Job failed: failed to pull image
This error message occurs when pulling an image from a container registry that requires authentication to access (it is not public).
In the job console output the error looks like:
Running with gitlab-runner 15.6.0~beta.186.ga889181a (a889181a)
on blue-2.shared.runners-manager.gitlab.com/default XxUrkriX
Resolving secrets
00:00
Preparing the "docker+machine" executor
00:06
Using Docker executor with image registry.gitlab.com/security-products/api-security:2 ...
Starting service registry.example.com/my-target-app:latest ...
Pulling docker image registry.example.com/my-target-app:latest ...
WARNING: Failed to pull image with policy "always": Error response from daemon: Get https://registry.example.com/my-target-app/manifests/latest: unauthorized (manager.go:237:0s)
ERROR: Job failed: failed to pull image "registry.example.com/my-target-app:latest" with specified policies [always]: Error response from daemon: Get https://registry.example.com/my-target-app/manifests/latest: unauthorized (manager.go:237:0s)
Error message
- In GitLab 15.9 and earlier,
ERROR: Job failed: failed to pull image
followed byError response from daemon: Get IMAGE: unauthorized
.
Solution
Authentication credentials are provided using the methods outlined in the Access an image from a private container registry documentation section. The method used is dictated by your container registry provider and its configuration. If your using a container registry provided by a third party, such as a cloud provider (Azure, Google Could (GCP), AWS and so on), check the providers documentation for information on how to authenticate to their container registries.
The following example uses the statically defined credentials authentication method. In this example the container registry is registry.example.com
and image is my-target-app:latest
.
-
Read how to Determine your
DOCKER_AUTH_CONFIG
data to understand how to compute the variable value forDOCKER_AUTH_CONFIG
. The configuration variableDOCKER_AUTH_CONFIG
contains the Docker JSON configuration to provide the appropriate authentication information. For example, to access private container registry:registry.example.com
with the credentialsabcdefghijklmn
, the Docker JSON looks like:{ "auths": { "registry.example.com": { "auth": "abcdefghijklmn" } } }
-
Add the
DOCKER_AUTH_CONFIG
as a CI/CD variable. Instead of adding the configuration variable directly in your.gitlab-ci.yml
file you should create a project CI/CD variable. -
Rerun your job, and the statically-defined credentials are now used to sign in to the private container registry
registry.example.com
, and let you pull the imagemy-target-app:latest
. If succeeded the job console shows an output like:Running with gitlab-runner 15.6.0~beta.186.ga889181a (a889181a) on blue-4.shared.runners-manager.gitlab.com/default J2nyww-s Resolving secrets 00:00 Preparing the "docker+machine" executor 00:56 Using Docker executor with image registry.gitlab.com/security-products/api-security:2 ... Starting service registry.example.com/my-target-app:latest ... Authenticating with credentials from $DOCKER_AUTH_CONFIG Pulling docker image registry.example.com/my-target-app:latest ... Using docker image sha256:139c39668e5e4417f7d0eb0eeb74145ba862f4f3c24f7c6594ecb2f82dc4ad06 for registry.example.com/my-target-app:latest with digest registry.example.com/my-target- app@sha256:2b69fc7c3627dbd0ebaa17674c264fcd2f2ba21ed9552a472acf8b065d39039c ... Waiting for services to be up and running (timeout 30 seconds)...
sudo: The "no new privileges" flag is set, which prevents sudo from running as root.
Starting with v5 of the analyzer, a non-root user is used by default. This requires the use of sudo
when performing privileged operations.
This error occurs with a specific container daemon setup that prevents running containers from obtaining new permissions. In most settings, this is not the default configuration, it's something specifically configured, often as part of a security hardening guide.
Error message
This issue can be identified by the error message generated when a before_script
or FUZZAPI_PRE_SCRIPT
is executed:
$ sudo apk add nodejs
sudo: The "no new privileges" flag is set, which prevents sudo from running as root.
sudo: If sudo is running in a container, you may need to adjust the container configuration to disable the flag.
Solution
This issue can be worked around in the following ways:
-
Run the container as the
root
user. It's recommended to test this configuration as it may not work in all cases. This can be done by modifying the CICD configuration and checking the job output to make sure thatwhoami
returnsroot
and notgitlab
. Ifgitlab
is displayed, use another workaround. Once tested thebefore_script
can be removed.apifuzzer_fuzz: image: name: $SECURE_ANALYZERS_PREFIX/$FUZZAPI_IMAGE:$FUZZAPI_VERSION$FUZZAPI_IMAGE_SUFFIX docker: user: root before_script: - whoami
Example job console output:
Executing "step_script" stage of the job script Using docker image sha256:8b95f188b37d6b342dc740f68557771bb214fe520a5dc78a88c7a9cc6a0f9901 for registry.gitlab.com/security-products/api-security:5 with digest registry.gitlab.com/security-products/api-security@sha256:092909baa2b41db8a7e3584f91b982174772abdfe8ceafc97cf567c3de3179d1 ... $ whoami root $ /peach/analyzer-api-fuzzing 17:17:14 [INF] API Security: Gitlab API Security 17:17:14 [INF] API Security: ------------------- 17:17:14 [INF] API Security: 17:17:14 [INF] API Security: version: 5.7.0
-
Wrap the container and add any dependencies at build time. This option has the benefit of running with lower privileges than root which may be a requirement for some customers.
-
Create a new
Dockerfile
that wraps the existing image.ARG SECURE_ANALYZERS_PREFIX ARG FUZZAPI_IMAGE ARG FUZZAPI_VERSION ARG FUZZAPI_IMAGE_SUFFIX FROM $SECURE_ANALYZERS_PREFIX/$FUZZAPI_IMAGE:$FUZZAPI_VERSION$FUZZAPI_IMAGE_SUFFIX USER root RUN pip install ... RUN apk add ... USER gitlab
-
Build the new image and push it to your local container registry before the API Fuzzing job starts. The image should be removed after the `` job has been completed.
TARGET_NAME=apifuzz-$CI_COMMIT_SHA docker build -t $TARGET_IMAGE \ --build-arg "SECURE_ANALYZERS_PREFIX=$SECURE_ANALYZERS_PREFIX" \ --build-arg "FUZZAPI_IMAGE=$APISEC_IMAGE" \ --build-arg "FUZZAPI_VERSION=$APISEC_VERSION" \ --build-arg "FUZZAPI_IMAGE_SUFFIX=$APISEC_IMAGE_SUFFIX" \ . docker login -u gitlab-ci-token -p $CI_JOB_TOKEN $CI_REGISTRY docker push $TARGET_IMAGE
-
Extend the
apifuzzer_fuzz
job and use the new image name.apifuzzer_fuzz: image: apifuzz-$CI_COMMIT_SHA
-
Remove the temporary container from the registry. See this documentation page for information on removing container images.
-
-
Change the GitLab Runner configuration, disabling the no-new-privileges flag. This could have security implications and should be discussed with your operations and security teams.
Index was outside the bounds of the array. at Peach.Web.Runner.Services.RunnerOptions.GetHeaders()
This error message indicates that the API Fuzzing analyzer is unable to parse the value of the FUZZAPI_REQUEST_HEADERS
or FUZZAPI_REQUEST_HEADERS_BASE64
configuration variable.
Error message
This issue can be identified by two error messages. The first error message is seen in the job console output and the second in the gl-api-security-scanner.log
file.
Error message from job console:
05:48:38 [ERR] API Security: Testing failed: An unexpected exception occurred: Index was outside the bounds of the array.
Error message from gl_api_security-scanner.log
:
08:45:43.616 [ERR] <Peach.Web.Core.Services.WebRunnerMachine> Unexpected exception in WebRunnerMachine::Run()
System.IndexOutOfRangeException: Index was outside the bounds of the array.
at Peach.Web.Runner.Services.RunnerOptions.GetHeaders() in /builds/gitlab-org/security-products/analyzers/api-fuzzing-src/web/PeachWeb/Runner/Services/[RunnerOptions.cs:line 362
at Peach.Web.Runner.Services.RunnerService.Start(Job job, IRunnerOptions options) in /builds/gitlab-org/security-products/analyzers/api-fuzzing-src/web/PeachWeb/Runner/Services/RunnerService.cs:line 67
at Peach.Web.Core.Services.WebRunnerMachine.Run(IRunnerOptions runnerOptions, CancellationToken token) in /builds/gitlab-org/security-products/analyzers/api-fuzzing-src/web/PeachWeb/Core/Services/WebRunnerMachine.cs:line 321
08:45:43.634 [WRN] <Peach.Web.Core.Services.WebRunnerMachine> * Session failed: An unexpected exception occurred: Index was outside the bounds of the array.
08:45:43.677 [INF] <Peach.Web.Core.Services.WebRunnerMachine> Finished testing. Performed a total of 0 requests.
Solution
This issue occurs due to a malformed FUZZAPI_REQUEST_HEADERS
or FUZZAPI_REQUEST_HEADERS_BASE64
variable. The expected format is one or more headers of Header: value
construction separated by a comma. The solution is to correct the syntax to match what is expected.
Valid examples:
Authorization: Bearer XYZ
X-Custom: Value,Authorization: Bearer XYZ
Invalid examples:
Header:,value
HeaderA: value,HeaderB:,HeaderC: value
Header