This action validates the checksums of _all_ [Gradle Wrapper](https://docs.gradle.org/current/userguide/gradle_wrapper.html) 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`.
![Image of a GitHub Diff of Gradle Wrapper displaying text 'Binary file not shown.'](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/1323708/71915219-477d7780-3149-11ea-9254-90c80dbffb0a.png)
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.
**Note:** `gradle-wrapper.jar` generated by Gradle 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. 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 out of this range, you may need to regenerate the `gradle-wrapper.jar` by running `./gradlew wrapper`. If you need to use a version of Gradle between 3.3 and 4.0, you can use a newer version of Gradle to generate the `gradle-wrapper.jar`.