One does not commit or compile credentials
Context:
This meme was brought to you by the PyPI Director of Infrastructure who accidentally hardcoded credentials - which could have resulted in compromissing the entire core Python ecosystem.
One does not commit or compile credentials
Context:
This meme was brought to you by the PyPI Director of Infrastructure who accidentally hardcoded credentials - which could have resulted in compromissing the entire core Python ecosystem.
This sounds like a really useful solution, how do you implement something like this? Especially with linter integration
I’m not sure, sorry. The source control team at work set it up a long time ago. I don’t know how it works - I’m just a user of it.
The linter probably just runs
git diff | grep @nocommit
or similar.Depending on which stack you’re using, you could use https://danger.systems to automatically fail PRs.
PRs? Isn’t the point of
@nocommit
that something does not get committed, and therefore no credentials are stored in the git repository? Even if the PR does not get merged, the file is still stored as a hit object and can be restored.I read the lint part and my brain forgot about everything else. You could stick the danger call in a pre commit hook though.