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Gradle Wrapper Validation Action

This action validates the checksums of all Gradle Wrapper JAR files present in the repository and fails if any unknown Gradle Wrapper JAR files are found.

The action should be run in the root of the repository, as it will recursively search for any files named gradle-wrapper.jar.

Note

Starting with v4 the setup-gradle action will automatically perform wrapper validation on each execution.

If you are using setup-gradle in your workflows, it is unlikely that you will need to use the wrapper-validation action.

The Gradle Wrapper Problem in Open Source

The gradle-wrapper.jar is a binary blob of executable code that is checked into nearly 2.8 Million GitHub Repositories.

Searching across GitHub you can find many pull requests (PRs) with helpful titles like 'Update to Gradle xxx'. Many of these PRs are contributed by individuals outside of the organization maintaining the project.

Many maintainers are incredibly grateful for these kinds of contributions as it takes an item off of their backlog. We assume that most maintainers do not consider the security implications of accepting the Gradle Wrapper binary from external contributors. There is a certain amount of blind trust open source maintainers have. Further compounding the issue is that maintainers are most often greeted in these PRs with a diff to the gradle-wrapper.jar that looks like this.

Image of a GitHub Diff of Gradle Wrapper displaying text 'Binary file not shown.'

A fairly simple social engineering supply chain attack against open source would be contribute a helpful “Updated to Gradle xxx” PR that contains malicious code hidden inside this binary JAR. A malicious gradle-wrapper.jar could execute, download, or install arbitrary code while otherwise behaving like a completely normal gradle-wrapper.jar.

Solution

We have created a simple GitHub Action that can be applied to any GitHub repository. This GitHub Action will do one simple task: verify that any and all gradle-wrapper.jar files in the repository match the SHA-256 checksums of any of our official releases.

If any are found that do not match the SHA-256 checksums of our official releases, the action will fail.

Additionally, the action will find and SHA-256 hash all homoglyph variants of files named gradle-wrapper.jar, for example a file named gradlе-wrapper.jar (which uses a Cyrillic е instead of e). The goal is to prevent homoglyph attacks which may be very difficult to spot in a GitHub diff. We created an example Homoglyph attack PR here.

Usage

Add to an existing Workflow

Simply add this action to your workflow after having checked out your source tree and before running any Gradle build:

uses: gradle/actions/wrapper-validation@v4

This action step should precede any step using gradle/gradle-build-action or gradle/actions/setup-gradle.

Add a new dedicated Workflow

Here's a sample complete workflow you can add to your repositories:

.github/workflows/gradle-wrapper-validation.yml

name: "Validate Gradle Wrapper"

on:
  push:
  pull_request:

jobs:
  validation:
    name: "Validation"
    runs-on: ubuntu-latest
    steps:
      - uses: actions/checkout@v4
      - uses: gradle/actions/wrapper-validation@v4

Contributing to an external GitHub Repository

Since GitHub Actions are completely free for open source projects and are automatically enabled on almost all projects, adding this check to a project's build is as simple as contributing a PR. Enabling the check requires no overhead on behalf of the project maintainer beyond merging the action.

You can add this action to your favorite Gradle based project without checking out their source locally via the GitHub Web UI thanks to the 'Create new file' button.

GitHub 'Create new file' Button bar picture

Simply add a new file named .github/workflows/gradle-wrapper-validation.yml with the contents mentioned above.

We recommend the message commit contents of:

  • Title: Official Gradle Wrapper Validation Action
  • Body (at minimum): See: https://github.com/gradle/actions/wrapper-validation

From there, you can easily follow the rest of the prompts to create a Pull Request against the project.

Validation Failures

A wrapper jar can fail validation for a few reasons:

  1. The wrapper is from a snapshot build of Gradle (nightly or release nightly) and you have not set allow-snapshots or allow-snapshot-wrappers to true.
  2. The wrapper jar is from a version of Gradle with an unverifiable wrapper jar (see below).
  3. The wrapper jar was not published by Gradle, and could be compromised.

If this GitHub action fails because a gradle-wrapper.jar was not published by Gradle, we highly recommend that you reach out to us at [email protected].

Unverifiable Wrapper Jars

Wrapper Jars generated by Gradle versions 3.3 to 4.0 are not verifiable because those files were dynamically generated by Gradle in a non-reproducible way. It's not possible to verify the gradle-wrapper.jar for those versions are legitimate using a hash comparison. If you have a validation failure, you should try to determine if the gradle-wrapper.jar was generated by one of these versions before running the build.

  • If the Gradle version in gradle-wrapper.properties is outside of this range, you can regenerate the gradle-wrapper.jar by running ./gradlew wrapper. This will generate a new, verifiable wrapper jar.
  • If you need to run your build with a version of Gradle between 3.3 and 4.0, you can use a newer version of Gradle to generate the gradle-wrapper.jar.

Resources

To learn more about verifying the Gradle Wrapper JAR locally, see our guide on the topic.