Using this GitHub Action, scan your code with SonarQube to detects Bugs, Vulnerabilities and Code Smells in up to 27 programming languages!
SonarQube is the leading product for Continuous Code Quality & Code Security. It supports most popular programming languages, including Java, JavaScript, TypeScript, C#, Python, C, C++, and many more.
To run an analysis on your code, you first need to set up your project on SonarQube. Your SonarQube instance must be accessible from GitHub, and you will need an access token to run the analysis (more information below under Environment variables).
Read more information on how to analyze your code here.
Project metadata, including the location to the sources to be analyzed, must be declared in the file sonar-project.properties
in the base directory:
sonar.projectKey=<replace with the key generated when setting up the project on SonarQube>
# relative paths to source directories. More details and properties are described
# in https://docs.sonarqube.org/latest/project-administration/narrowing-the-focus/
sonar.sources=.
The workflow YAML file will usually look something like this:
on:
# Trigger analysis when pushing to your main branches, and when creating a pull request.
push:
branches:
- main
- master
- develop
- 'releases/**'
pull_request:
types: [opened, synchronize, reopened]
name: Main Workflow
jobs:
sonarqube:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v3
with:
# Disabling shallow clone is recommended for improving relevancy of reporting
fetch-depth: 0
- name: SonarQube Scan
uses: sonarsource/sonarqube-scan-action@master
env:
SONAR_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.SONAR_TOKEN }}
SONAR_HOST_URL: ${{ secrets.SONAR_HOST_URL }}
If your source code file names contain special characters that are not covered by the locale range of en_US.UTF-8
, you can configure your desired locale like this:
- name: SonarQube Scan
uses: sonarsource/sonarqube-scan-action@master
env:
SONAR_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.SONAR_TOKEN }}
SONAR_HOST_URL: ${{ secrets.SONAR_HOST_URL }}
LC_ALL: "ru_RU.UTF-8"
If your SonarQube server uses a self-signed certificate, you can pass a root certificate (in PEM format) to the java certificate store:
- name: SonarQube Scan
uses: sonarsource/sonarqube-scan-action@master
env:
SONAR_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.SONAR_TOKEN }}
SONAR_HOST_URL: ${{ secrets.SONAR_HOST_URL }}
SONAR_ROOT_CERT: ${{ secrets.SONAR_ROOT_CERT }}
You can change the analysis base directory by using the optional input projectBaseDir
like this:
- name: SonarQube Scan
uses: sonarsource/sonarqube-scan-action@master
with:
projectBaseDir: app/src
In case you need to add additional analysis parameters, and you do not wish to set them in the sonar-project.properties
file, you can use the args
option:
- name: SonarQube Scan
uses: sonarsource/sonarqube-scan-action@master
with:
projectBaseDir: app/src
args: >
-Dsonar.python.coverage.reportPaths=coverage.xml
-Dsonar.tests=tests/
-Dsonar.verbose=true
More information about possible analysis parameters can be found in the documentation.
SONAR_TOKEN
– Required this is the token used to authenticate access to SonarQube. You can read more about security tokens here. You can set theSONAR_TOKEN
environment variable in the "Secrets" settings page of your repository, or you can add them at the level of your GitHub organization (recommended).SONAR_HOST_URL
– Required this tells the scanner where SonarQube is hosted. You can set theSONAR_HOST_URL
environment variable in the "Secrets" settings page of your repository, or you can add them at the level of your GitHub organization (recommended).SONAR_ROOT_CERT
– Holds an additional root certificate (in PEM format) that is used to validate the SonarQube server certificate. You can set theSONAR_ROOT_CERT
environment variable in the "Secrets" settings page of your repository, or you can add them at the level of your GitHub organization (recommended).
This GitHub Action will not work for all technologies. If you are in one of the following situations, you should use the following alternatives:
- Your code is built with Maven. Read the documentation about our Scanner for Maven.
- Your code is built with Gradle. Read the documentation about our Scanner for Gradle.
- You want to analyze a .NET solution. Read the documentation about our Scanner for .NET.
- You want to analyze C/C++ code. Read the documentation on analyzing C/C++ code.
To provide feedback (requesting a feature or reporting a bug) please post on the SonarSource Community Forum.
The Dockerfile and associated scripts and documentation in this project are released under the LGPLv3 License.
Container images built with this project include third party materials.