# Security Analysis in Psalm
Psalm can attempt to find connections between user-controlled input (like `$_GET['name']`) and places that we don’t want unescaped user-controlled input to end up (like `echo "
$name
"` by looking at the ways that data flows through your application (via assignments, function/method calls and array/property access).
You can enable this mode with the `--taint-analysis` command line flag. When taint analysis is enabled, no other analysis is performed.
Tainted input is anything that can be controlled, wholly or in part, by a user of your application. In taint analysis, tainted input is called a _taint source_.
Example sources:
- `$_GET[‘id’]`
- `$_POST['email']`
- `$_COOKIE['token']`
Taint analysis tracks how data flows from taint sources into _taint sinks_. Taint sinks are places you really don’t want untrusted data to end up.
Example sinks:
- ``
- `$pdo->exec("select * from users where name='" . $name . "'")`
## Taint Types
Psalm recognises a number of taint types by default, defined in the [Psalm\Type\TaintKind](https://github.com/vimeo/psalm/blob/master/src/Psalm/Type/TaintKind.php) class:
- `sql` - used for strings that could contain SQL
- `html` - used for strings that could contain angle brackets or unquoted strings
- `shell` - used for strings that could contain shell commands
- `callable` - used for callable strings that could be user-controlled
- `user_secret` - used for strings that could contain user-supplied secrets
- `system_secret` - used for strings that could contain system secrets
You're also free to define your own taint types when defining custom taint sources – they're just strings.
## Taint Sources
Psalm currently defines three default taint sources: the `$_GET`, `$_POST` and `$_COOKIE` server variables.
You can also [define your own taint sources](custom_taint_sources.md).
## Taint Sinks
Psalm currently defines a number of different for builtin functions and methods, including `echo`, `include`, `header`.
You can also [define your own taint sinks](custom_taint_sinks.md).
## Avoiding False-Positives
Nobody likes to wade through a ton of false-positives – [here’s a guide to avoiding them](avoiding_false_positives.md).
## Using Baseline With Taint Analysis
Since taint analysis is performed separately from other static code analysis, it makes sense to use a separate baseline for it.
You can use --use-baseline=PATH option to set a different baseline for taint analysis.
## Viewing Results in a User Interface
Psalm supports the [SARIF](http://docs.oasis-open.org/sarif/sarif/v2.0/csprd01/sarif-v2.0-csprd01.html) standard for exchanging static analysis results. This enables you to view the results in any SARIF compatible software, including the taint flow.
### GitHub Code Scanning
[GitHub code scanning](https://docs.github.com/en/free-pro-team@latest/github/finding-security-vulnerabilities-and-errors-in-your-code/about-code-scanning) can be set up by using the [Psalm GitHub Action](https://github.com/marketplace/actions/psalm-static-analysis-for-php).
Alternatively, the generated SARIF file can be manually uploaded as described in [the GitHub documentation](https://docs.github.com/en/free-pro-team@latest/github/finding-security-vulnerabilities-and-errors-in-your-code/uploading-a-sarif-file-to-github).
The results will then be avaible in the "Security" tab of your repository.
### Other SARIF compatible software
To generate a SARIF report run Psalm with the `--report` flag and a `.sarif` extension. For example:
```bash
psalm --report=results.sarif
```