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build(deps): bump apisec-inc/apisec-run-scan from 1.0.6 to 1.0.7 #39

build(deps): bump apisec-inc/apisec-run-scan from 1.0.6 to 1.0.7

build(deps): bump apisec-inc/apisec-run-scan from 1.0.6 to 1.0.7 #39

Workflow file for this run

# This workflow uses actions that are not certified by GitHub.
# They are provided by a third-party and are governed by
# separate terms of service, privacy policy, and support
# documentation.
# This workflow helps you trigger a SonarQube analysis of your code and populates
# GitHub Code Scanning alerts with the vulnerabilities found.
# (this feature is available starting from SonarQube 9.7, Developer Edition and above)
# 1. Make sure you add a valid GitHub configuration to your SonarQube (Administration > DevOps platforms > GitHub)
# 2. Import your project on SonarQube
# * Add your repository as a new project by clicking "Create project" from your homepage.
#
# 3. Select GitHub Actions as your CI and follow the tutorial
# * a. Generate a new token and add it to your GitHub repository's secrets using the name SONAR_TOKEN
# (On SonarQube, click on your avatar on top-right > My account > Security or ask your administrator)
#
# * b. Copy/paste your SonarQube host URL to your GitHub repository's secrets using the name SONAR_HOST_URL
#
# * c. Copy/paste the project Key into the args parameter below
# (You'll find this information in SonarQube by following the tutorial or by clicking on Project Information at the top-right of your project's homepage)
# Feel free to take a look at our documentation (https://docs.sonarqube.org/latest/analysis/github-integration/)
# or reach out to our community forum if you need some help (https://community.sonarsource.com/c/sq/10)
name: SonarQube analysis
on:
push:
branches: [ "master" ]
pull_request:
branches: [ "master" ]
workflow_dispatch:
permissions:
pull-requests: read # allows SonarQube to decorate PRs with analysis results
jobs:
Analysis:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- name: Harden Runner
uses: step-security/harden-runner@63c24ba6bd7ba022e95695ff85de572c04a18142 # v2.7.0
with:
egress-policy: audit
- name: Analyze with SonarQube
# You can pin the exact commit or the version.
# uses: SonarSource/[email protected]
uses: SonarSource/sonarqube-scan-action@7295e71c9583053f5bf40e9d4068a0c974603ec8
env:
GITHUB_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }} # Needed to get PR information
SONAR_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.SONAR_TOKEN }} # Generate a token on SonarQube, add it to the secrets of this repo with the name SONAR_TOKEN (Settings > Secrets > Actions > add new repository secret)
SONAR_HOST_URL: ${{ secrets.SONAR_HOST_URL }} # add the URL of your instance to the secrets of this repo with the name SONAR_HOST_URL (Settings > Secrets > Actions > add new repository secret)
with:
# Additional arguments for the sonarcloud scanner
args:
# Unique key of your project. You can find it in SonarQube > [my project] > Project Information (top-right menu)
# mandatory
-Dsonar.projectKey=
# Comma-separated paths to directories containing main source files.
#-Dsonar.sources= # optional, default is project base directory
# When you need the analysis to take place in a directory other than the one from which it was launched
#-Dsonar.projectBaseDir= # optional, default is .
# Comma-separated paths to directories containing test source files.
#-Dsonar.tests= # optional. For more info about Code Coverage, please refer to https://docs.sonarcloud.io/enriching/test-coverage/overview/
# Adds more detail to both client and server-side analysis logs, activating DEBUG mode for the scanner, and adding client-side environment variables and system properties to the server-side log of analysis report processing.
#-Dsonar.verbose= # optional, default is false