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Evaluating alerts from secret scanning

Learn about additional features that can help you evaluate alerts and prioritize their remediation, such as checking a secret's validity.

Who can use this feature?

People with admin access to a repository can view secret scanning alerts for the repository.

Secret scanning alerts for partners runs automatically on public repositories and public npm packages to notify service providers about leaked secrets on GitHub.

Secret scanning alerts for users are available for user-owned public repositories for free. Organizations using GitHub Enterprise Cloud with a license for GitHub Advanced Security can also enable secret scanning alerts for users on their private and internal repositories. Additionally, secret scanning alerts for users are available and in beta on user-owned repositories for GitHub Enterprise Cloud with Enterprise Managed Users. For more information, see "About secret scanning alerts" and "About GitHub Advanced Security."

For information about how you can try GitHub Advanced Security for free, see "Setting up a trial of GitHub Advanced Security."

About evaluating alerts

There are some additional features that can help you to evaluate alerts in order to better prioritize and manage them. You can:

Checking a secret's validity

Validity checks help you prioritize alerts by telling you which secrets are active or inactive. An active secret is one that could still be exploited, so these alerts should be reviewed and remediated as a priority.

By default, GitHub checks the validity of GitHub tokens and displays the validation status of the token in the alert view.

ValidityStatusResult
Active secretactiveGitHub checked with this secret's provider and found that the secret is active
Possibly active secretunknownGitHub does not support validation checks for this token type yet
Possibly active secretunknownGitHub could not verify this secret
Secret inactiveinactiveYou should make sure no unauthorized access has already occurred

Validity checks for partner patterns is available on all types of repositories on GitHub. To use this feature, you must have a license for GitHub Advanced Security.

For information on how to enable validity checks for partner patterns, see "Enabling validity checks for your repository," and for information on which partner patterns are currently supported, see "Supported secret scanning patterns."

You can use the REST API to retrieve a list of the most recent validation status for each of your tokens. For more information, see "REST API endpoints for secret scanning" in the REST API documentation. You can also use webhooks to be notified of activity relating to a secret scanning alert. For more information, see the secret_scanning_alert event in "Webhook events and payloads."

Asking GitHub Copilot Chat about secret scanning alerts

With a GitHub Copilot Enterprise license, you can ask Copilot Chat for help to better understand security alerts, including secret scanning alerts, in repositories in your organization. For more information, see "Asking GitHub Copilot questions in GitHub.com."

Performing an on-demand validity check

Once you have enabled validity checks for partner patterns for your repository, you can perform an "on-demand" validity check for any supported secret by clicking Verify secret in the alert view. GitHub will send the pattern to the relevant partner and display the validation status of the secret in the alert view.

Screenshot of the UI showing a secret scanning alert. A button, labeled "Verify secret" is highlighted with an orange outline.

Reviewing GitHub token metadata

Note

Metadata for GitHub tokens is currently in public beta and subject to change.

In the view for an active GitHub token alert, you can review certain metadata about the token. This metadata may help you identify the token and decide what remediation steps to take.

Tokens, like personal access token and other credentials, are considered personal information. For more information about using GitHub tokens, see GitHub's Privacy Statement and Acceptable Use Policies.

Screenshot of the UI for a GitHub token, showing the token metadata.

Metadata for GitHub tokens is available for active tokens in any repository with secret scanning enabled. If a token has been revoked or its status cannot be validated, metadata will not be available. GitHub auto-revokes GitHub tokens in public repositories, so metadata for GitHub tokens in public repositories is unlikely to be available. The following metadata is available for active GitHub tokens:

MetadataDescription
Secret nameThe name given to the GitHub token by its creator
Secret ownerThe GitHub handle of the token's owner
Created onDate the token was created
Expired onDate the token expired
Last used onDate the token was last used
AccessWhether the token has organization access

Only people with admin permissions to the repository containing a leaked secret can view security alert details and token metadata for an alert. Enterprise owners can request temporary access to the repository for this purpose. If access is granted, GitHub will notify the owner of the repository containing the leaked secret, report the action in the repository owner and enterprise audit logs, and enable access for 2 hours. For more information, see "Accessing user-owned repositories in your enterprise."

Next steps