SonarScanner
The SonarScanner is the scanner to use when there is no specific scanner for your build system.
Configuring your project
Create a configuration file in your project's root directory called sonar-project.properties
Running SonarScanner from the zip file
To run SonarScanner from the zip file, follow these steps:
- Expand the downloaded file into the directory of your choice. We'll refer to it as
<INSTALL_DIRECTORY>
in the next steps. - Update the global settings to point to your SonarQube server by editing
$install_directory/conf/sonar-scanner.properties
:#----- Default SonarQube server
#sonar.host.url=http://localhost:9000
- Add the
<INSTALL_DIRECTORY>/bin
directory to your path. - Verify your installation by opening a new shell and executing the command
sonar-scanner -h
, orsonar-scanner.bat -h
on Windows. You should get output like this:usage: sonar-scanner [options]
Options:
-D,--define <arg> Define property
-h,--help Display help information
-v,--version Display version information
-X,--debug Produce execution debug output
If you need more debug information, you can add one of the following to your command line:-X
,--verbose
, or-Dsonar.verbose=true
. - Run the following command from the project base directory to launch analysis and pass your authentication token:
sonar-scanner -Dsonar.token=myAuthenticationToken
Alternatively, instead of passing the token in your command line, you can create theSONAR_TOKEN
environment variable and set the token as its value before you launch the analysis.
Running SonarScanner from the Docker image
To scan using the SonarScanner Docker image, use the following command:
Scanning C, C++, or Objective-C projects
Scanning projects that contain C, C++, or Objective-C code requires some additional analysis steps. You can find full details on the C/C++/Objective-C language page.
Sample projects
To help you get started, simple project samples are available for most languages on GitHub. They can be browsed or downloaded. You'll find them filed under sonarqube-scanner/src
.
Alternatives to sonar-project.properties
If a sonar-project.properties
file cannot be created in the root directory of the project, there are several alternatives:
- The properties can be specified directly through the command line. Example:
sonar-scanner -Dsonar.projectKey=myproject -Dsonar.sources=src1
- The property
project.settings
can be used to specify the path to the project configuration file (this option is incompatible with thesonar.projectBaseDir
property). Example:sonar-scanner -Dproject.settings=../myproject.properties
- The root folder of the project to analyze can be set through the
sonar.projectBaseDir
property since SonarScanner 2.4. This folder must contain asonar-project.properties
file ifsonar.projectKey
is not specified on the command line. Additional analysis parameters can be defined in this project configuration file or through command-line parameters.
Alternate analysis directory
If the files to be analyzed are not in the directory where the analysis starts from, use the sonar.projectBaseDir
property to move analysis to a different directory. E.g. analysis begins from jenkins/jobs/myjob/workspace
but the files to be analyzed are in ftpdrop/cobol/project1
. This is configured in sonar-project.properties
as follows:
You can configure more parameters. See Analysis parameters for details.
Advanced Docker configuration
The following sections offer advanced configuration options when running the SonarScanner with Docker. Click the headings to expand the instructions.
Running as a non-root user
You can run the Docker image as a non-root user using the --user
option. For example, to run as the current user:
When running the container as a non-root user you have to make sure the user has read and write access to the directories you are mounting (like your source code or scanner cache directory), otherwise you may encounter permission-related problems.
Caching scanner files
To prevent SonarScanner from re-downloading language analyzers each time you run a scan, you can mount a directory where the scanner stores the downloads so that the downloads are reused between scanner runs. On some CI systems, you also need to add this directory to your CI cache configuration.
The following command will store and use cache between runs:
You can also change the location of where the scanner puts the downloads with the SONAR_USER_HOME
environment variable.
Using self-signed certificates
If you need to configure a self-signed certificate for the scanner to communicate with your SonarQube instance, you can use a volume under /tmp/cacerts
to add it to the containers java trust store:
Alternatively, you can create your own container that includes the modified cacerts
file. Create a Dockerfile
with the following contents:
Then, assuming both the cacerts
and Dockerfile
are in the current directory, create the new image with a command such as:
Troubleshooting
Java heap space error or java.lang.OutOfMemoryError
Increase the memory via the SONAR_SCANNER_OPTS
environment variable when running the scanner from a zip file:
In Windows environments, avoid the double quotes, since they get misinterpreted, and combine the two parameters into a single one.
Unsupported major.minor version
Upgrade the version of Java being used for analysis or use one of the native package (that embed its own Java runtime).
Property missing: 'sonar.cs.analyzer.projectOutPaths'. No protobuf files will be loaded for this project.
Scanner CLI is not able to analyze .NET projects. Please, use the SonarScanner for .NET. If you are running the SonarScanner for .NET, ensure that you are not hitting a known limitation.
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