A Security Realm which informs the Jenkins environment how and where to pull user (or identity) information from. Also commonly known as "authentication.".
This setting is controlled mainly by two axes: Security Realm, which determines users and their passwords, as well as what groups the users belong to.
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Managing Jenkins · System Configuration group · Security group · Status Information group · Troubleshooting group · Tools and Actions group · Uncategorized group.
The following steps will delete the configuration for security realm and authorization strategy. Make sure you have a backup, to be able to restore the ...
Document Jenkins on Kubernetes. Security. Overview ... Users can still hit the URL ... Without any special plugins to manage authentication, an instance of Jenkins ...
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To see the ALL CLASSES link when browsing Javadoc without frames, script-src 'unsafe-inline' must also be added to the CSP header. HTML Publisher Plugin. Make ...
Access to URLs provided by the security realm (to implement user signup or handle SSO authentication) ( /securityRealm/ ). agent.jar , remoting.jar , and ...
Cross-Site Request Forgery (CSRF or XSRF) is a type of security vulnerability in web applications. Without protection from CSRF, a Jenkins user or ...
Jenkins can expose a TCP port that allows inbound agents to connect to it. It can be enabled, disabled, and configured in Manage Jenkins » Security. The two ...
To maximize security, credentials configured in Jenkins are stored in an encrypted form on the controller Jenkins instance (encrypted by the Jenkins instance ID) ...