Security overview contains focused views where you can explore trends in detection, remediation, and prevention of security alerts and dig deep into the current state of your codebases.
- Information about Dependabot features and alerts is shown for all repositories.
- Information for GitHub Advanced Security features, such as code scanning and secret scanning, is shown for enterprises that use GitHub Advanced Security.
For more information, see "About Dependabot alerts" and "About GitHub Advanced Security."
About the views
Note
All views show information and metrics for the default branches of the repositories you have permission to view in an organization or enterprise.
The views are interactive with filters that allow you to look at the aggregated data in detail and identify sources of high risk, see security trends, and see the impact of pull request analysis on blocking security vulnerabilities entering your code. As you apply multiple filters to focus on narrower areas of interest, all data and metrics across the view change to reflect your current selection. For more information, see "Filtering alerts in security overview."
There are dedicated views for each type of security alert. You can limit your analysis to a specific type of alert, and then narrow the results further with a range of filters specific to each view. For example, in the secret scanning alert view, you can use the "Secret type" filter to view only secret scanning alerts for a specific secret, like a GitHub personal access token.
Note
Security overview displays active alerts raised by security features. If there are no alerts shown in security overview for a repository, undetected security vulnerabilities or code errors may still exist or the feature may not be enabled for that repository.
About security overview for organizations
The application security team at your company can use the different views for both broad and specific analyses of your organization's security status. For example, the team can use the "Coverage" view to monitor the adoption of features across your organization or by a specific team as you roll out GitHub Advanced Security, or use the "Risk" view to identify repositories with more than five open secret scanning alerts. You can also use security overview to find a set of repositories and enable or disable security features for them all at the same time. For more information, see "Enabling security features for multiple repositories."
You can find security overview on the Security tab for any organization. Each view shows a summary of the data that you have access to. As you add filters, all data and metrics across the view change to reflect the repositories or alerts that you've selected. For information about permissions, see "Permission to view data in security overview."
Security overview has multiple views that provide different ways to explore enablement and alert data.
- Risk and Alert views: explore the risk from security alerts of all types or focus on a single alert type and identify your risk from specific vulnerable dependencies, code weaknesses, or leaked secrets, see "Assessing your code security risk."
- Coverage: assess the adoption of code security features across repositories in the organization, see "Assessing adoption of code security features."
- Secret scanning: find out which types of secret are blocked by push protection, see "Viewing metrics for secret scanning push protection."
About security overview for enterprises
You can find security overview on the Code Security tab for your enterprise. Each page displays aggregated and repository-specific security information for your enterprise.
As with security overview for organizations, security overview for enterprises has multiple views that provide different ways to explore data.
For information about permissions, see "Permission to view data in security overview."
Permission to view data in security overview
Organization-level overview
If you are an owner or security manager for an organization, you can see data for all the repositories in the organization in all views.
If you are an organization or team member, you can view security overview for the organization and see data for repositories where you have an appropriate level of access.
Organization or team member with | Risk and alerts views | Coverage view |
---|---|---|
admin access for one or more repositories | View data for those repositories | View data for those repositories, and enable and disable security features |
write access for one or more repositories | View code scanning and Dependabot data for those repositories | No access |
read or triage access for one or more repositories | No access | No access |
Security alert access for one or more repositories | View all security alert data for those repositories | No access |
Custom organization role with permission to view one or more types of security alert | View allowed alert data for all repositories in all views | No access |
Note
To ensure a consistent and responsive experience, for organization members, the organization-level security overview pages will only display results from the most recently updated 3,000 repositories. If your results have been restricted, a notification will appear at the top of the page. Organization owners and security managers will see results from all repositories.
For more information about access to security alerts and related views, see "Managing security and analysis settings for your repository" and "About custom repository roles."
Enterprise-level overview
Note
If you are an enterprise owner, you will need to join an organization as an organization owner to view data for the organization's repositories in both the organization-level and enterprise-level overview. For more information, see "Managing your role in an organization owned by your enterprise."
In the enterprise-level security overview, you can see data for all organizations where you are an organization owner or security manager. However, you cannot use the enterprise-level security overview to enable and disable security features. For more information, see "Managing GitHub Advanced Security features for your enterprise."