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From YouTube: GitLab Vulnerability Export Demo
A
Allen
and
Savannah
are
going
to
demonstrate
the
vulnerability
export
feature,
so
you
go
to
security
and
compliance
and
security
dashboard.
Then
it
shows
a
list
of
vulnerabilities,
and
now
you
have
the
ability
to
export
them
to
CSV,
so
I'm
gonna
click
the
export
to
CSV
button.
It's
gonna,
take
all
the
vulnerabilities
and
make
them
available
in
a
comma
separated
format
so
that
you
can
view
them
and
other
things,
including
your
default
spreadsheet
viewer,
like
numbers
or
Excel
or
Google
sheets,
so
click
open
here
and
then
you
can
see
the
vulnerabilities
same
one
basically
same
ones.
A
B
Let
me
talk
about
the
beckon
part,
so,
behind
the
scenes,
what
is
happening
is
actually
we
are
creating
the
export
entity
database.
Then
we
schedule
a
background
job
that
is
doing
all
of
that
internally,
so
that
collects
all
vulnerabilities
and
and
generates
the
CSV
file
and
then,
as
soon
as
it
is
completed
it,
it
is
marking
the
export
as
completed
and
then
front-end
can
download
it
from
from
the
endpoint
download
the
CSV
file.
C
So
much
anything
on
the
forensic,
yes,
I
can
add
a
couple
of
lines
on
the
front
inside.
So
when
you
click
the
button,
what
we
do
is
we
ask,
we
talk,
we
tell
the
backend
to
initiate
the
export
and
then
the
backend
returns
us
URL,
which
we
keep
pulling
until
the
the
export
is
ready.
So
that's
why
you
keep
seeing
the
loading
button
at
the
loading
icon
and
then
once
it's
ready.
The
backend
tells
us
that
it's
ready
and
we
download
the
file
using
the
new
end
going
yeah.
A
It's
a
good
point,
I
think
a
Lamech.
The
story
is
there:
there
can
be
hundreds
of
thousands
for
some
projects
vulnerabilities,
so
we
don't
want
the
user
to
sit
there
and
have
to
wait
on
them.
We
want
to
move
that,
get
it
when
it
comes
when
it's
available.
So
right.
Thank
someone.
Thank
so
much
and
great
work
on
this
runs
feature.
Thank
you.
A.