[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":794},["ShallowReactive",2],{"/en-us/blog/security-strengthened-by-interation-and-transparency":3,"navigation-en-us":38,"banner-en-us":438,"footer-en-us":448,"blog-post-authors-en-us-Heather Simpson":690,"blog-related-posts-en-us-security-strengthened-by-interation-and-transparency":704,"assessment-promotions-en-us":746,"next-steps-en-us":784},{"id":4,"title":5,"authorSlugs":6,"body":8,"categorySlug":9,"config":10,"content":14,"description":8,"extension":26,"isFeatured":12,"meta":27,"navigation":28,"path":29,"publishedDate":20,"seo":30,"stem":34,"tagSlugs":35,"__hash__":37},"blogPosts/en-us/blog/security-strengthened-by-interation-and-transparency.yml","Security Strengthened By Interation And Transparency",[7],"heather-simpson",null,"unfiltered",{"slug":11,"featured":12,"template":13},"security-strengthened-by-interation-and-transparency",false,"BlogPost",{"title":15,"description":16,"authors":17,"heroImage":19,"date":20,"body":21,"category":9,"tags":22},"Security strengthened by iteration, and transparency","Iteration is a core value at GitLab. How do you keep things protected when change is a constant?",[18],"Heather Simpson","https://res.cloudinary.com/about-gitlab-com/image/upload/v1749670837/Blog/Hero%20Images/two-brown-trees.jpg","2020-05-18","\n\n***We sat down with senior application security engineer, Dominic Couture to talk about the challenges of working in AppSec, why the principle of least privilege works, and why our level of transparency makes our product more, not less, secure.***\n\n---\n\n![Dominic Couture Headshot](https://about.gitlab.com/images/blogimages/dcouture.png)\n\n**Name:** Dominic Couture\n\n**Title:** Senior security engineer, [Application Security](/topics/devsecops/)\n\n**How long have you been at GitLab?** I started in November 2019\n\n**GitLab handle:** [@dcouture](https://gitlab.com/dcouture)\n{: #tanuki-orange}\n\n**Connect with Dominic:** [LinkedIn](https://ca.linkedin.com/in/dominic-couture)/[Twitter](https://twitter.com/dee__see)\n\n\n\n#### Tell us what you do here at GitLab:\nI read a lot of GitLab code! I look for vulnerabilities or simply code improvements before it is shipped, as part of defense in depth. I also review issues when they’re in the planning stage for potential vulnerabilities, help maintain our [secure coding guidelines](https://docs.gitlab.com/ee/development/secure_coding_guidelines.html), write new tests and automation to support team workflows, and triage bugs that come through our bug bounty program.\n\n#### What’s the most challenging or rewarding aspect of your role?\nThe most challenging thing is trying to keep an eye on everything. There are tons of new features being worked on at all times and we know we can’t review every single one of them, so we prioritize and review what appears to be the most security critical. However, sometimes vulnerabilities will slip by in issues that didn’t seem to be security-sensitive at first. When this happens, we need to find ways to optimize our processes to ensure we catch potential issues  the next time we’re in a similar situation.\n\nThe most rewarding thing is when we do the above successfully! When we identify a common flaw in our code or process and we successfully put automation in place that eliminates it. It makes the product safer and the workload lighter so we can concentrate on new things.\n\n#### And, what are the top 2-3 initiatives you’re currently focused on?\nMany of the things we work on in the Application Security team are [not public](https://handbook.gitlab.com/handbook/values/#not-public) until they are finished so I can’t link to the detailed issues, but with that in mind…\n* I’m currently working on getting some automated testing in place to catch permission bugs in a specific part of our app. This will cover existing code and make it easy to test future code in that part of the application.\n* We’re also starting on a code review in another part of GitLab to find information leaks in APIs that might return more than the user asked for. We’re looking for issues similar to the leaks we’ve seen previously [through Elasticsearch results](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/29491).\n* I’m getting to know the teams and features in the [Verify](/stages-devops-lifecycle/verify/) and [Release](/stages-devops-lifecycle/release/) stages as I’m the [stable counterpart](https://handbook.gitlab.com/handbook/security/security-engineering/application-security/stable-counterparts.html) for them. I’m developing an expertise in those specific areas so I can have more context and provide more insightful comments when those teams ask for application security reviews.\n\n#### What is the most significant piece of security advice you could provide to a colleague or friend?\nI think everyone on our security team [who’s been asked this question](/blog/the-sky-is-not-falling/) has answered to use a password manager and I completely agree. A password manager and a unique password (and [MFA](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multi-factor_authentication)!) on every service you use is the difference between a relatively harmless leak on that small niche forum you participate in and a full identity theft due to a [credential stuffing](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Credential_stuffing) attack that pivots to your bank account.\n\nFor a more technical piece of advice, I think the [principle of least privilege](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Principle_of_least_privilege) is something to keep in mind at all times. When applied to APIs, the idea is to have the strictest permission requirements as a default. This ensures that if the permissions aren’t verified properly in the code, the result would be a bug which wouldn’t allow access to an asset by a user who should have access rather than a security bug that results in a data breach.\n\n#### How did you get into security?\nHackers have always fascinated me. As a child I had the desire to understand how what they were doing was possible and it is what got me interested in computers in the first place. I was in my early teens when I got my first computer and I quickly taught myself how to build websites. When talking to people about my programming projects I was warned about things like SQL injection and other types of security vulnerabilities. That piqued my curiosity and while researching those topics I discovered that [wargames](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wargame_(hacking)) existed. Since then, “hacking for fun” has always been a hobby for me. I’ve been a software developer for most of my career and while security has always been a part of that job, it was only when I joined GitLab that I became a security professional and transformed my hobby into a career.\n\n#### What do you look forward to most in security in the next 5 years?\nWhile automation will never solve all the problems, it can certainly solve some of them! I’m both curious and excited about security scanners moving to the next level with more insightful analysis and fewer false positives. AI and machine learning are the usual buzzwords we hear around this topic but I mainly look forward to [SAST](https://docs.gitlab.com/ee/user/application_security/sast/) tools having a better understanding of the code flow and being able to tell if my `os.Open(path)` call really involves user input and is indeed risky; instead of just flagging it for me to review *in case* it is.\n\n#### What mainstream or industry propagated security myth would you like to be better understood?\n[Virtual Private Networks](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virtual_private_network) (VPNs) are highly praised in online advertising lately and the claims around the safety they provide seem to be a bit exaggerated. In fact, [GitLab doesn’t even have a corporate VPN](https://handbook.gitlab.com/handbook/security/#why-we-dont-have-a-corporate-vpn)! I really enjoy [Tom Scott’s video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WVDQEoe6ZWY) about the subject. In brief: VPNs nowadays provide little more security than the near-ubiquitous https protocol already does in many of the everyday use cases, and that includes using your laptop at the coffee shop. Don’t get me wrong, VPNs are very relevant and there are many valid reasons to use one, I just feel like the advertising around them isn’t completely truthful and people with no technical knowledge might be led to buy things they don’t need.\n\n#### GitLab is very unique in that we strive to be incredibly transparent...about everything.  What sort of challenges or opportunities does that present to you as a security professional?\nTransparency is a part of everything we do here at GitLab and most things are [public by default](https://handbook.gitlab.com/handbook/values/#public-by-default). This transparency-driven approach can lead to some occasional share of things that should not be public. Keeping an eye on those things to catch them before someone else does is challenging. Luckily for us, we run a public bug bounty program and have reporters that are very skilled at finding those things before the “bad people” do, should something slip through our fingers. While we’d rather keep those bounty payments to a minimum, it’s still a better outcome for GitLab than if someone had abused the leaked information.\n\nWith our open-source code base, the [blog articles](/blog/how-to-exploit-parser-differentials/) the security research team publishes about their findings, and our disclosure of the [bugs that come in through our bug bounty program](https://gitlab.com/groups/gitlab-org/-/issues?scope=all&utf8=%E2%9C%93&state=opened&label_name[]=HackerOne) 30 days after being fixed, external researchers get an almost unparalleled level of insight and information about GitLab. This allows them to find and report much better vulnerabilities than if they were doing their testing in a black-box environment. The security risks associated with our level of transparency are usually the first thing to come to people’s mind, but in fact, our transparency makes our software more secure.\n\n> The security risks associated with our level of transparency are usually the first thing to come to people’s mind, but in fact, our transparency makes our software more secure.\n\n#### What sources make up your daily newsfeed to keep up to date in the industry?\nI try to use social media as little as possible, but I can’t deny that Twitter is the best place for security news. There are great blogs and websites to follow ([our GitLab Security blog](/blog/categories/security/), [PortSwigger’s research blog](https://portswigger.net/research) and [Google Project Zero](https://googleprojectzero.blogspot.com/) come to mind) but there are also tons of independent researchers that publish only once or twice a year and Twitter is the place to find out about all that good content.\n\n## Now, for the questions you *really* want to have answered:\n\n\n#### Favorite Linux distro?\nArch Linux! The installation process isn’t as hard as the memes pretend it is, the documentation is wonderful and you have a lot of power over what runs on your system. Arch uses systemd which has been a polarizing topic in recent years but if you don’t mind that it’s a great distro.\n\n#### What’s your favorite season?\nWinter. Luckily for me, I live in a place that’s covered in snow nearly 6 months a year so there’s a lot of winter to enjoy! There’s nothing like the freedom and fun of exploring the local forest and mountains on my nordic touring skis.\n\n#### When you’re not working, what do you enjoy doing?\nI run, bike, ski and hike a lot (always with my 2 australian shepherds by my side) and that serves as permanent training for the one or two ultramarathons I run each year. I love camping out in the forest with as little equipment as possible and basically just spending time in the forest. When inside, I like to hunt for security bugs on companies that run bug bounty programs (if it’s not on GitLab, it’s not work anymore, right?).\n\n#### Have a favorite quote?\n> The best time to plant a tree was 20 years ago. The second best time is now.\n\nThe internet says it’s a Chinese proverb though there’s nothing to back that up. We could probably all point to things we could/should have done differently in life but all that time spent thinking about it is time that isn’t spent actually doing it and benefiting from the change. It’s not too late!\n\nCover image by [Johannes Plenio](https://www.pexels.com/@jplenio) on [Pexels](https://www.pexels.com/photo/two-brown-trees-1632790/)\n",[23,24,25,25],"careers","inside GitLab","security","yml",{},true,"/en-us/blog/security-strengthened-by-interation-and-transparency",{"title":15,"description":16,"ogTitle":15,"ogDescription":16,"noIndex":12,"ogImage":19,"ogUrl":31,"ogSiteName":32,"ogType":33,"canonicalUrls":31},"https://about.gitlab.com/blog/security-strengthened-by-interation-and-transparency","https://about.gitlab.com","article","en-us/blog/security-strengthened-by-interation-and-transparency",[23,36,25,25],"inside-gitlab","sezjonK73g4k_MktPgUB-pxOu3_ymmBEYNr1P5GQcpw",{"data":39},{"logo":40,"freeTrial":45,"sales":50,"login":55,"items":60,"search":368,"minimal":399,"duo":418,"pricingDeployment":428},{"config":41},{"href":42,"dataGaName":43,"dataGaLocation":44},"/","gitlab logo","header",{"text":46,"config":47},"Get free 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Shadow Takeaways from Jacie","Recap of my experience in the CEO Shadow Program.",[710],"Jacie Bandur","https://res.cloudinary.com/about-gitlab-com/image/upload/v1749664102/Blog/Hero%20Images/gitlab-values-cover.png","2021-05-18","\n\n{::options parse_block_html=\"true\" /}\n\n\nHi! I’m Jacie Bandur. I completed GitLab’s CEO Shadow program from 2021-04-26 through 2021-05-07. It was a really enlightening experience. I generally work in Learning and Development and consider myself a lifelong learner. I can’t even explain how much I learned in such a short about of time. I learned a lot about the business. I learned a lot about the product. But learned even more about the importance of iteration in everything we do.\n\n### Qualifications to Participate\n\nI wanted to start this off with touching on qualifications to participate in the program.\n\nI am the type of person that has gone through most of my life thinking I’m not qualified for things. I’m not qualified for that job, that promotion, that program. The list goes on and on.\n\nWhen I saw the [CEO Shadow program](/blog/ceo-shadow-impressions-takeaways/) kick off in 2019, I really wanted to participate. I was a little intimidated. Who wouldn’t be, spending 2 weeks with the CEO of any company? But time passed and all the sudden it was 2021 and I had not taken any steps to participating in the program.\n\nIf you are sitting there waiting for someone to tell you that you are qualified to participate in this program, I’m not big on giving “pep talks,” but here’s me telling you - You are qualified for this program. There’s never going to be a good or perfect time to do it. Tell your manager you want to do the CEO Shadow program. Stop waiting. Sign up today.\n\nNote: Take a look at the [eligibility](https://handbook.gitlab.com/handbook/ceo/shadow/#eligibility) section of the CEO Shadow page for more information on signing up.\n\n### Pre-Program Tips\n\nThere are many things recommended for shadows to do pre-program outlined on the CEO Shadow handbook page. As I was going through the program there were things that I thought helped me (or would have helped me).\n\nHere are my top 6 recommendations:\n\n1. Make sure your team knows you will be unavailable for 2 weeks. This isn’t a program that can or should be done alongside your normal day to day work. I found catching up from the 2 weeks away kind of difficult because I was trying to keep up on what was going on and I had a bunch of half done things.\n1. Talk with people who have done the shadow program - schedule at least 3 coffee chats with CEO Shadow Alumni.\n1. Have food that is easy to eat quickly. Sid’s meetings are back to back most days, so you will have small amounts of time to eat throughout the day. Sid does eat during calls, which you are welcome to do, too, but if you are taking notes, it is difficult to eat. And this will make you realize why speedy meetings are so important!\n1. Listen to the [Executive Leadership LinkedIn Learning course](https://www.linkedin.com/learning/executive-leadership/).\n1. Be prepared to ask questions. When doing the program virtually, there isn’t a ton of time for asking questions, so when one would come up, I would add it to a note on my computer and ask if there was ever time with just the shadows and Sid.\n1. Take at least 1 day off after the program. Take even a couple of days off if you can! This is recommended on the handbook page, but I can’t stress this enough.\n\n\n### Takeaways\n\n**Group Conversations**\n\nI’ve been at GitLab for almost 4 years. When I joined, I made it a point to attend as many GC’s as I could. I had gotten out of the habit of attending Group Conversations. After attending them again for 2 weeks, I realized how important they are to understand better what is going on across the business. Everything in the organization is so intertwined. It’s helpful to understand what other teams are working on and succeeding in.\n\n**Feedback**\n\nWe should all be giving and receiving feedback often. We have a whole [handbook page on giving and receiving feedback](https://handbook.gitlab.com/handbook/people-group/guidance-on-feedback/). Read the handbook page and watch the videos, as well. Practice giving feedback. I recommend using the [1-1 agenda](https://handbook.gitlab.com/handbook/leadership/1-1/suggested-agenda-format/) Sid uses, because Feedback is an essential piece of that agenda, and it makes feedback more of a routine thing.\n\n**Biggest Takeaway**\n\nWe have an incredible team here at GitLab, from Engineering to Product to Sales to People and all the groups in between. There are so many great ideas. I observed the constant reinforcement by Sid to start with something small and build on it. You can ALWAYS make something more complex. It’s hard to go back to something more simple when you start with something complex.\n\nA couple of quotes that I heard from Sid during the program that reinforced this point:\n\n- “Every complex system evolves from a simple system that worked.”\n- “It’s very clear what is the simple solution. We can always make it more complicated as we go on.”\n\nI know they are very similar, but they happened in different meetings on different days, so the point was reinforced repeatedly.\n\nDuring the program, I reflected on the projects that I’am working on. How many of them am I trying to do too much on before releasing. Probably all of them. When I’m working on projects in the future, I will break them down into smaller, more doable chunks. Iteration is hard - it’s a skill to be practicing constantly.\n\n\n### Overall\n\nOverall, the program was really insightful and impactful. If you haven’t participated in it yet, I cannot encourage you enough to do so!\n",{"slug":715,"featured":12,"template":13},"ceo-shadow-recap",{"content":717,"config":729},{"title":718,"description":719,"authors":720,"heroImage":722,"date":723,"body":724,"category":9,"tags":725},"Why I love contributing to GitLab","Making small meaningful changes is what it's all about.",[721],"Austin Regnery","https://res.cloudinary.com/about-gitlab-com/image/upload/v1749679501/Blog/Hero%20Images/new-feature.png","2021-05-11","It was mid-morning on a Tuesday in February, and I had 10 minutes in between meetings. So I decided to try and solve a pain point of mine.\nYou see, I had to memorize this HTML snippet to create a collapsible section in GitLab Issue descriptions and comments, but I kept forgetting it. Was it `summary` or `section`? I could never remember.\n```html\n\u003Cdetails>\n\u003Csummary>Insert Title\u003C/summary>\nHidden content\n\u003C/details>\n```\nEven though it is not vanilla Markdown, GitLab knows how to interpret some HTML. I used this formatting trick fairly often since full-page screenshots can occupy a lot of screen space, which leads to excessive scrolling.\nSo I decided to poke around our codebase to see how the other Markdown shortcuts worked. To my surprise, it was pretty straightforward. Each shortcut had a simple text input that mapped to each button. This implementation was simple to replicate since I just needed to copy/paste and replace a few words.\n![Image of Vue and Haml files with editor shortcuts](https://about.gitlab.com/images/blogimages/why-i-love-contributing-to-gitlab/vue-haml.png){: .shadow}\nThe Vue and Haml files with the new shortcut\n\nI started a branch and began hacking away at the code. Now, I would never call myself a Software Engineer, but I like to try and make things from time to time. I was able to add a new shortcut to the toolbar to insert this code snippet for me in less than 10 minutes. No more memorizing! Making contributions like this is what makes working at GitLab so special.\nNow, it wasn't ready for production, but I at least had something that worked. I shared it with my UX colleagues in Slack, and it started to gain traction with several up-votes and few constructive comments on how to make it better.\nWith the functionality flushed out, a few other designers helped me get a better icon added to our SVG library. Using clear iconography is critical for communicating information more clearly.\n| Initial Icon | Final Icon |\n| - | - |\n| ![SVG of chevron right icon](https://about.gitlab.com/images/blogimages/why-i-love-contributing-to-gitlab/chevron-right.svg) | ![SVG of details block icon](https://about.gitlab.com/images/blogimages/why-i-love-contributing-to-gitlab/details-block.svg) |\n\nThe last thing to do was resolve my failing tests, and I had several teammates help me do that.\n![Gif of the shortcut being used](https://about.gitlab.com/images/blogimages/why-i-love-contributing-to-gitlab/demo.gif)\n\nToday [this change](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/merge_requests/54938) merged! Now I solved a pain point for me and others. It took a few months to go from idea to production, but the effort was super low. I'd say the return on my initial investment, 10 minutes, is super high.\n> Having a direct impact on a product was never an option for me before joining GitLab.\n\n![Image of participants in the Merge Request](https://about.gitlab.com/images/blogimages/why-i-love-contributing-to-gitlab/participants.png)\n\n\nThank you to everyone that helped me deploy this\n",[726,727,728],"UX","product","AWS",{"slug":730,"featured":12,"template":13},"why-i-love-contributing-to-gitlab",{"content":732,"config":744},{"title":733,"description":734,"authors":735,"heroImage":737,"date":723,"body":738,"category":9,"tags":739},"Placebo Lines on the Pipeline Graph","Have you noticed the connecting lines missing on your pipelines lately? Here's why",[736],"Sam Beckham","https://res.cloudinary.com/about-gitlab-com/image/upload/v1749679507/Blog/Hero%20Images/ci-cd.png","\n\n{::options parse_block_html=\"true\" /}\n\n\n\nHave you ever pressed the close door button on the elevator, in the hope that you'll save a few precious seconds?\nOr got frustrated at the person stood next to you at the cross-walk, neglecting to press the button?\nWell, maybe they know something you don't, or perhaps you know this already.\nMany buttons in our society lie to us.\n[David McRaney](https://youarenotsosmart.com/2010/02/10/placebo-buttons/) dubbed these, \"Placebo buttons\" and they're everywhere.\nThose elevator doors won't close any faster and the cross-walk button has no effect on the lights.\nThe only lights they control are the lights on the buttons themselves.\nThey give you the feedback you crave, but that's all they're doing.\n\nThese placebos aren't constrained to the physical world, they're prevalent in [UI design](/blog/the-evolution-of-ux-at-gitlab/) too.\nFrom literal placebo buttons like [YouTube's downvote](https://www.quora.com/Does-downvoting-a-comment-on-YouTube-even-do-anything), to more subtle effects like Instagram always [pretending to work](https://www.fastcompany.com/1669788/the-3-white-lies-behind-instagrams-lightning-speed), or progress bars that have a [fixed animation](https://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2017/02/why-some-apps-use-fake-progress-bars/517233/).\nThey're everywhere if you know where to look.\n\nAt GitLab, we created a placebo of our own in one of our core features; the pipeline graph.\n\nThose of you who have used our pipeline graph, will be familiar with its appearance.\nThere's a series of jobs, grouped by stages, connected by a series of lines depicting the relationships between the jobs.\nBut these lines might be lying to you.\nThese lines are indiscriminately drawn between each job in a stage, regardless of their relationship.\nThese lines are placebos.\n\n![The old pipeline rendering with lines connecting every job in a stage](https://about.gitlab.com/images/blogimages/placebo-lines_old-graph.png)\n\nThis wasn't a problem to begin with.\nA basic pipeline has several jobs across a handful of stages.\nJobs in each stage would run parallel to each other, but each stage would run sequentially.\nIn the image shown above, all the jobs in the test stage would trigger at the same time. Once those jobs had finished, all the jobs in the build stage would trigger.\nWe used rudimentary CSS to draw lines connecting each job in one stage to each job in the next.\nThese lines weren't calculated based on their connections, but still reflected the story they were telling.\n\nSince the introduction of `needs` relationships in [v12.2](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-foss/-/issues/47063), pipelines got a bit more complicated.\nNow you could configure a job in a later stage to trigger as soon as a job in an earlier stage completed.\nLooking at our old example, we could set the API deployment to run as soon as our spec tests passed.\nThis skips the remaining tests and the entire build stage, turning our lines into pretty little liars.\n\nWe had many internal discussions about these lines, and how to show the relationships between jobs.\nThere's the [`needs` visualization](https://docs.gitlab.com/ee/ci/directed_acyclic_graph/#needs-visualization), which does an excellent job of displaying these relationships, but the main pipeline graph was still inaccurate.\nFor the past few months, we've been [refactoring the pipeline graph](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/276949), giving it a new lease of life and fixing some of its issues along the way.\nOne of those issues were the faked lines.\nIn the new version, we can accurately draw lines between jobs.\nLines that actually depict the relationships jobs have with each other.\nNow the lines no-longer lie!\n\n![The newer pipeline graph showing the correct needs links between jobs](https://about.gitlab.com/images/blogimages/placebo-lines_new-graph.png)\n\nThe above image shows an unreleased version of the pipeline graph.\nYou can see the lines drawn between the jobs to show that the `deploy:API` job can start as soon as the `rspec` job is successful.\nSomething the old lines (shown earlier in this post) would have been unable to depict.\n\nOne unfortunate downside of this is that these lines can be quite expensive to calculate.\nThey're actual DOM nodes, drawn deliberately and placed precisely.\nOn smaller graphs this isn't a problem, but some of our initial tests have found pipelines with a potential 8000+ job connections.\nThat kind of calculation would grind the browser to a halt, and nobody wants that.\n\nAt GitLab, we believe in boring solutions.\nWe make the simple change that sets us on the path towards where we want to be.\nShip it, get feedback, and iterate.\nSo that's what we did.\nIn the first phase of this rollout, we shipped the new pipeline graph with no lines connecting the jobs.\nWe don't have to worry about the expensive calculations, and we still get to roll out the refactored pipeline graph.\n\n![The current (v13.11) pipeline graph showing no links between jobs](https://about.gitlab.com/images/blogimages/placebo-lines_current-graph.png)\n\nWe know some of you will miss them, but fear not.\nBoring solutions are just technical debt if you don't iterate on them.\nSo the [improved lines are coming](https://gitlab.com/groups/gitlab-org/-/epics/4509) in a future release, along with several other improvements to the pipeline graph.\nWe're already starting to roll out the new [Job Dependencies](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/298973) view which shows the jobs in a (much closer to) execution order.\nStay tuned for more updates, and watch [Sarah Groff Hennigh Palermo's talk](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R2EKqKjB7OQ) for the technical side of this effort and a deeper dive into some of the decisions we made.\n",[740,741,742,743],"CI","frontend","agile","design",{"slug":745,"featured":12,"template":13},"placebo-lines-on-the-pipeline-graph",{"promotions":747},[748,762,773],{"id":749,"categories":750,"header":752,"text":753,"button":754,"image":759},"ai-modernization",[751],"ai-ml","Is AI achieving its promise at scale?","Quiz will take 5 minutes or less",{"text":755,"config":756},"Get your AI maturity 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