Currently creating a github actions which works fine but I get warnings like this:
Performance may suffer from in-memory cache misses. Increase max heap size of Gradle build process to reduce cache misses.
When running this github action:
name: SonarQube
on:
push:
branches:
- master # or the name of your main branch
pull_request:
types: [opened, synchronize, reopened]
jobs:
build:
name: SonarQube
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout#v3
with:
fetch-depth: 0 # Shallow clones should be disabled for a better relevancy of analysis
- name: Set up JDK 11
uses: actions/setup-java#v3
with:
java-version: 11
distribution: corretto
cache: gradle
- name: Build and analyze
env:
SONAR_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.SONAR_TOKEN }}
SONAR_HOST_URL: ${{ secrets.SONAR_HOST_URL }}
run: ./gradlew --info sonarqube -Dsonar.host.url=$SONAR_HOST_URL -Dsonar.login=$SONAR_TOKEN
What can be changed to make this github actions run without giving said warnings?
Related
I tried to perform step actions/checkout#v3 once on chained jobs, but it seems like the "build" job does not get the code. I'm getting an error "can't find the project".
Can I call actions/checkout # v3 once for two jobs?
It works when I call the code checkout twice.
name: publish-nuget
on:
push:
branches:
- main
jobs:
prepare:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
- name: Checkout code
uses: actions/checkout#v3
- name: Get package version
id: get_package_version
uses: kzrnm/get-net-sdk-project-versions-action#v1.3.0
with:
proj-path: ProjectOne.csproj
build:
needs: prepare
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- name: Checkout code
uses: actions/checkout#v3
# Add the projects path below
strategy:
matrix:
projects: [
'ProjectOne.csproj',
'ProjectTwo.csproj',
]
steps:
- name: Pack NuGet
run: dotnet pack ${{ matrix.projects }} -p:PackageVersion=${{ env.PACKAGE_VERSION }} --configuration Release
It does not work when I call the code checkout once (on the 'prepare' job).
name: publish-nuget
on:
push:
branches:
- main
jobs:
prepare:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
- name: Checkout code
uses: actions/checkout#v3
- name: Get package version
id: get_package_version
uses: kzrnm/get-net-sdk-project-versions-action#v1.3.0
with:
proj-path: ProjectOne.csproj
build:
needs: prepare
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
# Add the projects path below
strategy:
matrix:
projects: [
'ProjectOne.csproj',
'ProjectTwo.csproj',
]
steps:
- name: Pack NuGet
run: dotnet pack ${{ matrix.projects }} -p:PackageVersion=${{ env.PACKAGE_VERSION }} --configuration Release
Having a job being dependent on another job, is just for logical purposes and not state or artifact dependency sharing. You are actually runing the 2 jobs on 2 different agents. If you want to share something from the prepare job, you can use the cache or artifact API. E.g. using the cache API to cache the path 'somePath'. Same step for downloading the cache.
- name: Cached build artifacts
uses: actions/cache#v2
id: artifactcache
with:
path: somePath
key: buildArtifacts${{ github.run_number}}
As you are not gaining anything form splitting this up into 2 jobs, I would run everything in a single job instead.
I have developed an application where the backend is developed using Java language (with maven) and the frontend is using Angular language. I host both parts in one project in github.
Now I am interested on the use of SonarQube on SonarCloud. For this purpose, I am following the information gathered from the community sonarsource and the standard documentation from sonarcloud. The idea is to use GiHub Actions for analyzing the projects.
What I have created is a .github/workflows/build.yml on the root folder with the content:
name: Build
on:
push:
branches:
- master
pull_request:
types: [opened, synchronize, reopened]
jobs:
sonarcloud:
name: SonarCloud
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout#v2
with:
fetch-depth: 0 # Shallow clones should be disabled for a better relevancy of analysis
- name: Set up JDK 11
uses: actions/setup-java#v1
with:
java-version: 11
- name: Cache SonarCloud packages
uses: actions/cache#v1
with:
path: ~/.sonar/cache
key: ${{ runner.os }}-sonar
restore-keys: ${{ runner.os }}-sonar
- name: Cache Maven packages
uses: actions/cache#v1
with:
path: ~/.m2
key: ${{ runner.os }}-m2-${{ hashFiles('**/pom.xml') }}
restore-keys: ${{ runner.os }}-m2
- name: Build and analyze
env:
GITHUB_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }} # Needed to get PR information, if any
SONAR_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.SONAR_TOKEN }}
run: mvn -B verify org.sonarsource.scanner.maven:sonar-maven-plugin:sonar -Dsonar.projectKey=kendo-tournament-backend
with:
projectBaseDir: ./backend/
- name: SonarCloud Frontend Scan
uses: SonarSource/sonarcloud-github-action#master
env:
GITHUB_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }} # Needed to get PR information, if any
SONAR_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.SONAR_TOKEN }}
with:
projectBaseDir: ./frontend/
Where basically, I create some steps for executing the maven project, and another extra step to execute the frontend. On both of them, I included the projectBaseDir with the path to both projects' folders as specified here.
Also, as suggested on the documentation, I have included a sonar-project.properties on the root folder of the frontend folder with:
sonar.projectKey=kendo-tournament-frontend
sonar.organization=softwaremagico
# This is the name and version displayed in the SonarCloud UI.
#sonar.projectName=Kendo Tournament Manager Frontend
#sonar.projectVersion=1.0
# Path is relative to the sonar-project.properties file. Replace "\" by "/" on Windows.
#sonar.sources=.
# Encoding of the source code. Default is default system encoding
#sonar.sourceEncoding=UTF-8
And for the backend, I have updated the root pom.xml with the:
<properties>
<sonar.organization>softwaremagico</sonar.organization>
<sonar.host.url>https://sonarcloud.io</sonar.host.url>
</properties>
As required.
But, no analyses scan is launch for any of both projects. And SonarCloud looks like is ignoring the configuration.
Probably, something is missing but I cannot imagine what. What steps are needed to set up a monorepository correctly using Java and Angular in Github?
Ok, after the example obtained from here. The changes I have made are:
Two different workflows on github, one for backend and one for frontend. Not one workflow with all steps together.
Include two different sonar-project.properties. One inside the backend folder, and one inside the frontend folder. Now I have added the sonar.sources line as follows:
sonar.projectKey=kendo-tournament-backend
sonar.organization=softwaremagico
sonar.sources=.
That ensures that is only for this folder.
For launching CircleCi with Sonar (for backend) edit file .circleci/config.yml:
version: 2.1
jobs:
build:
docker:
- image: 'circleci/openjdk:11-jdk'
working_directory: ~/KendoTournamentManager/backend
steps:
- checkout:
path: ~/KendoTournamentManager
- run:
name: Analyze on SonarCloud
command: mvn verify sonar:sonar -Dsonar.projectKey=kendo-tournament-backend
workflows:
main:
jobs:
- build:
context: SonarCloud
And now seems working fine:
I wrote following workflow in repo1 to trigger into repo2. While executing it's giving following error:
Creating settings.xml with server-id: github Writing to
/home/runner/.m2/settings.xml Error: No file in
/home/runner/work/server/server matched to [**/pom.xml], make sure you
have checked out the target repository
name: Trigger to QA Repo from dev repo
on:
push:
branches:
- add-bat-wf
pull_request:
branches:
- develop
- master
jobs:
build:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout#v2
- name: Step 1 - Set up JDK 11
uses: actions/setup-java#v2
with:
java-version: '11'
distribution: 'adopt'
cache: maven
- uses: convictional/trigger-workflow-and-wait#v1.3.0
with:
owner: myOrg
repo: QA_Repo
github_token: ${{ secrets.GIT_ACCESS_TOKEN }}
workflow_file_name: workflow.yml
ref: master
wait_interval: 10
inputs: '{ "suite": "src/test/APITest.xml", "platform": "api"}'
trigger_workflow: true
wait_workflow: true
I have a scan step built into my GitHub Action build and that is working fine. I reach out to my company's SonarQub instance and the scan is initiated. The problem I am having is trying to stop a build if there is a failure. For the life of me I can't seem to find a way to do that. Also, when I watch the scan it appears as though the next steps might be happening before it finishes (not positive on that but thought I would mention it). Any ideas??
name: Build, test, & deploy
on: [push]
jobs:
sonarqube:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout#v2
with:
# Disabling shallow clone is recommended for improving relevancy of reporting
fetch-depth: 0
# Triggering SonarQube analysis as results of it are required by Quality Gate check
- name: SonarQube Scan
uses: sonarsource/sonarqube-scan-action#master
env:
SONAR_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.SONAR_TOKEN }}
SONAR_HOST_URL: ${{ secrets.SONAR_HOST_URL }}
- name: SonarQube Quality Gate check
uses: sonarsource/sonarqube-quality-gate-action#master
# Force to fail step after specific time
timeout-minutes: 5
env:
SONAR_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.ADAM_SONAR_TOKEN }}
build:
name: Project build & package
if: "!contains(github.even.head_commit.message, '[skip-ci]')"
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
env:
#environment var for this job
#### the rest of the build is below this area - I didn't think it was necessary to include
You should use needs in your build job:
build:
needs: sonarqube
name: Project build & package
You can find information here: https://docs.github.com/en/actions/using-jobs/using-jobs-in-a-workflow
The answer is using "needs": https://docs.github.com/en/actions/reference/workflow-syntax-for-github-actions#jobsjob_idneeds
I'm trying to put together a CI / CD pipeline for GitHub and strugglign with attaching my build artifact to the release. Here's my ci.yml
name: CI
on:
push:
branches: [ main ]
pull_request:
branches: [ main ]
workflow_dispatch:
jobs:
Build:
runs-on: windows-latest
env:
BuildPath: ${{ github.workspace }}\BuildTesting\bin\Release\net5.0-windows
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout#v2
- name: Setup .NET SDK
uses: actions/setup-dotnet#v1.8.1
with:
dotnet-version: 5.0.x
- name: Install dependencies
run: dotnet restore
- name: Build
run: dotnet build --configuration Release --no-restore
- name: Upload a Build Artifact
uses: actions/upload-artifact#v2.2.4
with:
name: thingy
path: ${{ github.workspace }}\BuildTesting\bin\Release\net5.0-windows
retention-days: 1
That runs well and I get a release artifact:
I was under the impression I'd be able to download that existing artifact but I couldn't get my head around why actions/download-artifact isn't downloading anything. So I found another article and in their cd step they were re-building, so I figured that in doing that at least I'd have a fresh build in the cd workflow to pull from. So I create a release triggered on tag push events. I can't use most zip utilities becuase they don't run on windows. I have to user windows-latest as the target framework for WPF desktop applications has to be net5.0-windows and using ubuntu-latest it fails. I tried papeloto/action-zip#v1 and in one case I managed to get a zip file which then attached to the release successfully but was only 22 bytes, so empty once I downloaded it. Here's my cd.yml:
name: CD
on:
push:
tags:
- '*'
jobs:
Release:
runs-on: windows-latest
env:
BuildPath: ${{ github.workspace }}\BuildTesting\bin\Release\net5.0-windows
ZipName: TheThing.zip
steps:
# Build the solution
- uses: actions/checkout#v2
- name: Setup .NET SDK
uses: actions/setup-dotnet#v1.8.1
with:
dotnet-version: 5.0.x
- name: Install dependencies
run: dotnet restore
- name: Build
run: dotnet build --configuration Release --no-restore
- name: Zip the release
uses: << What should I use to zip ${{ env.BuildPath }} ? >>
# Create a Release on the GitHub project
- name: Create release
id: create_release
uses: actions/create-release#v1
env:
GITHUB_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }} # This token is provided by Actions, you do not need to create your own token
with:
tag_name: ${{ github.ref }}
release_name: ${{ github.ref }}
draft: false
prerelease: false
# Upload the Build Artifact to the Release
- name: Update release asset
id: upload-release-asset
uses: actions/upload-release-asset#v1
env:
GITHUB_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
with:
upload_url: ${{ steps.create_release.outputs.upload_url }} # This pulls from the CREATE RELEASE step above, referencing it's ID to get its outputs object, which include a `upload_url`. See this blog post for more info: https://jasonet.co/posts/new-features-of-github-actions/#passing-data-to-future-steps
asset_path: .\${{ env.ZipName }}
asset_name: ${{ env.ZipName }}
asset_content_type: application/zip
Can anyone please recommend a GitHub action for zipping a folder that will work for windows-latest ... or another approach?
Long term I want to go with semantic versioning but GitVersion overwhelmed me last time I tried, granted I'd never working with yml builds before. I'd like to keep this as simple as possible as I'm starting to grok the basics of what's going on and once I get past this I'll start looking into GitVersion.
I'm using a test repository located here so you can see the whole thing.
You may use PowerShell to zip your artifacts using 7Zip. Please check my repository in GitHub. That compile a WPF app, compress the artifacts, create a prerelease and upload files under that release.