# Dynamic Application Security Testing with GitLab CI/CD [Dynamic Application Security Testing (DAST)](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dynamic_program_analysis) is using the popular open source tool [OWASP ZAProxy](https://github.com/zaproxy/zaproxy) to perform an analysis on your running web application. It can be very useful combined with [Review Apps](../review_apps/index.md). ## Example All you need is a GitLab Runner with the Docker executor (the shared Runners on GitLab.com will work fine). You can then add a new job to `.gitlab-ci.yml`, called `dast`: ```yaml dast: image: owasp/zap2docker-stable variables: website: "https://example.com" script: - mkdir /zap/wrk/ - /zap/zap-baseline.py -J gl-dast-report.json -t $website || true - cp /zap/wrk/gl-dast-report.json . artifacts: paths: [gl-dast-report.json] ``` The above example will create a `dast` job in your CI/CD pipeline which will run the tests on the URL defined in the `website` variable (change it to use your own) and finally write the results in the `gl-dast-report.json` file. You can then download and analyze the report artifact in JSON format. TIP: **Tip:** Starting with [GitLab Enterprise Edition Ultimate][ee] 10.4, this information will be automatically extracted and shown right in the merge request widget. To do so, the CI job must be named `dast` and the artifact path must be `gl-dast-report.json`. [Learn more about DAST results shown in merge requests](https://docs.gitlab.com/ee/user/project/merge_requests/dast.html). [ee]: https://about.gitlab.com/gitlab-ee/