# Safety Security and License Configuration file # We recommend checking this file into your source control in the root of your Python project # If this file is named .safety-policy.yml and is in the same directory where you run `safety check` it will be used by default. # Otherwise, you can use the flag `safety check --policy-file ` to specify a custom location and name for the file. # To validate and review your policy file, run the validate command: `safety validate policy_file --path ` security: # configuration for the `safety check` command ignore-cvss-severity-below: 0 # A severity number between 0 and 10. Some helpful reference points: 9=ignore all vulnerabilities except CRITICAL severity. 7=ignore all vulnerabilities except CRITICAL & HIGH severity. 4=ignore all vulnerabilities except CRITICAL, HIGH & MEDIUM severity. ignore-cvss-unknown-severity: False # True or False. We recommend you set this to False. ignore-vulnerabilities: # Here you can list multiple specific vulnerabilities you want to ignore (optionally for a time period) # We recommend making use of the optional `reason` and `expires` keys for each vulnerability that you ignore. 25853: # Example vulnerability ID reason: we don't use the vulnerable function # optional, for internal note purposes to communicate with your team. This reason will be reported in the Safety reports expires: '2022-10-21' # datetime string - date this ignore will expire, best practice to use this variable continue-on-vulnerability-error: False # Suppress non-zero exit codes when vulnerabilities are found. Enable this in pipelines and CI/CD processes if you want to pass builds that have vulnerabilities. We recommend you set this to False. alert: # configuration for the `safety alert` command security: # Configuration specific to Safety's GitHub Issue alerting github-issue: # Same as for security - these allow controlling if this alert will fire based # on severity information. # default: not set # ignore-cvss-severity-below: 6 # ignore-cvss-unknown-severity: False # Add a label to pull requests with the cvss severity, if available # default: true # label-severity: True # Add a label to pull requests, default is 'security' # requires private repo permissions, even on public repos # default: security # labels: # - security # Assign users to pull requests, default is not set # requires private repo permissions, even on public repos # default: empty # assignees: # - example-user # Prefix to give issues when creating them. Note that changing # this might cause duplicate issues to be created. # default: "[PyUp] " # issue-prefix: "[PyUp] " # Configuration specific to Safety's GitHub PR alerting github-pr: # Same as for security - these allow controlling if this alert will fire based # on severity information. # default: not set # ignore-cvss-severity-below: 6 # ignore-cvss-unknown-severity: False # Set the default branch (ie, main, master) # default: empty, the default branch on GitHub branch: '' # Add a label to pull requests with the cvss severity, if available # default: true # label-severity: True # Add a label to pull requests, default is 'security' # requires private repo permissions, even on public repos # default: security # labels: # - security # Assign users to pull requests, default is not set # requires private repo permissions, even on public repos # default: empty # assignees: # - example-user # Configure the branch prefix for PRs created by this alert. # NB: Changing this will likely cause duplicate PRs. # default: pyup/ branch-prefix: pyup/ # Set a global prefix for PRs # default: "[PyUp] " pr-prefix: "[PyUp] "