Rich here.

I started to write an apology for this week’s Summary, because I missed last week due to an unplanned stomach bug that hit at 4am Thursday, when I normally write these. It was nearly 5 days before I fully recovered. Then I realized I had fully drafted a Summary on March 11 – an abridged version due to my daughter waking up with a stomach infection. It turns out I left that one as a draft, and never even noticed… that’s what kids do to ya.

So I’m including all my post-RSA conference links here, and adding some newer content as well. We’re building up a massive backlog of content at this point, so there’s no shortage of things to write about. And if you didn’t believe in the germ theory of infection, my home is conclusive proof.

Someone emailed asking if we could cover more cloud providers than just AWS. We tend to focus on them because they are the biggest, and that’s where most of our work is, but we are actively trying to expand coverage. Email us at info@securosis.com if you have any interesting sites we should follow, or see any interesting presentations. There are a bunch of catch-up links here, but next week I plan to focus more on Microsoft and Google.

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Top Posts for the Week

Tool of the Week

This is a new section highlighting a cloud, DevOps, or security tool we think you should take a look at. We still struggle to keep track of all the interesting tools that can help us, so if you have submissions please email them to info@securosis.com.

This week I want to focus on a tool that is one of the cornerstones of DevOps in many organizations, but with which not all security professionals are familiar. We need this as a foundation so we can start talking about some cool security extensions next week. Thus, ladies and gentlemen, today we will talk about Jenkins.

Jenkins is the most popular continuous integration tool right now. It’s Open Source with a very active community and a ton of support and plugins. For those of you without development experience, a CI server automates integrating application code changes and running tests. It can do a lot more than that, but continuously integrating changes (even from multiple teams’ contributors in massive projects) and making sure the code still works is a big deal. What makes Jenkins so special is that large community and massive plugin support. Instead of merely integrating updated code, it can detect when code is updated in a repository, pull it and integrate, automatically stand up a test environment, run thousands of tests, send alerts back on failures, or push code into further testing or production if it passes. The current version (and upcoming version 2.0) are automation servers that can handle complex workflows and pipelines for managing application updates.

This automation offers tremendous security benefits. For example there is a full audit trail of all code changes. Better yet, you can integrate security testing into your automation pipeline, far more effectively than previous ways we’ve used security testing tools. You can flag changes to security-sensitive parts of code like encryption or authentication to require a security sign-off. All this using the same tool developers use anyway, and integrated into their processes. Jenkins isn’t just for code – you can use it for server configuration, and using a tool like Packer it can create gold images and perform automatic security scans. You can even run complex vulnerability assessments on cloud/virtual infrastructure using code templates like Vagrant, Cloudformation, or Terraform.

Next week we’ll talk about one of the coolest security testing tools that integrates with Jenkins.

Securosis Blog Posts this Week

Maximizing WAF Value

Other Securosis News and Quotes

Training and Events

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