This version of the SonarQube documentation is no longer maintained. It relates to a version of SonarQube that is not active.

See latest version
Start Free
10.5 | Project administration | Webhooks

Webhooks

On this page

Webhooks notify external services when a project analysis is complete. An HTTP POST request including a JSON payload is sent to each URL. URLs may be specified at both the project and global levels. The project-level specification does not replace global-level webhooks. All hooks at both levels are called.

The HTTP(S) call:

  • Is made regardless of the status of the background task.
  • Includes a JSON document as payload, using the POST method.
  • Has a content type of application/json, with UTF-8 encoding.

Configuration

You can configure up to 10 webhooks at the project level in Project Settings > Webhooks.

An additional set of 10 webhooks can be configured at the global level in Administration > Configuration > Webhooks.

If configured, all 20 will be executed.

Delivery and payload

Delivery

The Webhook administration console shows the result and timestamp of the most recent delivery of each webhook with the payload available via the list icon. Results and payloads of earlier deliveries are available from the tools menu to the right of each webhook.

Response records are purged after 30 days.

The URL must respond within 10 seconds or the delivery is marked as failed.

Payload

An HTTP header X-SonarQube-Project with the project key as the value is sent to allow quick identification of the project involved.

The payload is a JSON document that includes:

  • When the analysis was performed: see analysedAt
  • The identification of the project analyzed: see project
  • Each Quality Gate criterion checked and its status: see qualityGate
  • The Quality Gate status of the project: see qualityGate.status
  • The status and the identifier of the background task : see status and taskId
  • User-specified properties: see properties

Example

{
    "serverUrl": "http://localhost:9000",
    "taskId": "AVh21JS2JepAEhwQ-b3u",
    "status": "SUCCESS",
    "analysedAt": "2016-11-18T10:46:28+0100",
    "revision": "c739069ec7105e01303e8b3065a81141aad9f129",
    "project": {
        "key": "myproject",
        "name": "My Project",
        "url": "https://mycompany.com/sonarqube/dashboard?id=myproject"
    },
    "properties": {
    },
    "qualityGate": {
        "conditions": [
            {
                "errorThreshold": "1",
                "metric": "new_security_rating",
                "onLeakPeriod": true,
                "operator": "GREATER_THAN",
                "status": "OK",
                "value": "1"
            },
            {
                "errorThreshold": "1",
                "metric": "new_reliability_rating",
                "onLeakPeriod": true,
                "operator": "GREATER_THAN",
                "status": "OK",
                "value": "1"
            },
            {
                "errorThreshold": "1",
                "metric": "new_maintainability_rating",
                "onLeakPeriod": true,
                "operator": "GREATER_THAN",
                "status": "OK",
                "value": "1"
            },
            {
                "errorThreshold": "80",
                "metric": "new_coverage",
                "onLeakPeriod": true,
                "operator": "LESS_THAN",
                "status": "NO_VALUE"
            }
        ],
        "name": "SonarQube way",
        "status": "OK"
    }
}

Securing your webhooks

After you've configured your server to receive payloads, you want to be sure that the payloads you receive are initiated by SonarQube and not by attackers. You can do this by validating a hash signature that ensures that requests originate from SonarQube.

Setting your secret

To set your secret in SonarQube:

  1. From the project or organization where you're securing your webhooks, navigate to the webhooks settings at Project Settings > Webhooks
  2. You can either click Create to create a new webhook or click an existing webhook's settings drop-down and click Update.
  3. Enter a random string in the Secret text box. This is used as the key to generate the HMAC hex digest value in the X-Sonar-Webhook-HMAC-SHA256 header.
  4. Click Update.

Validating SonarQube Payloads

After setting your secret, it's used by SonarQube to create a hash signature with each payload that's passed using the X-Sonar-Webhook-HMAC-SHA256 HTTP header. The header value needs to match the signature you are expecting to receive. SonarQube uses an HMAC lower-case SHA256 digest to compute the signature of the request body. Here's some sample Java code for your server:

private static boolean isValidSignature(YourHttpRequest request) {
  String receivedSignature = request.getHeader("X-Sonar-Webhook-HMAC-SHA256");
  // See Apache commons-codec
  String expectedSignature = new HmacUtils(HmacAlgorithms.HMAC_SHA_256, "your_secret").hmacHex(request.getBody())
  return Objects.equals(expectedSignature, receivedSignature);  
}

If the signatures don't match, then the payload should be ignored.

Additional parameters

A basic authentication mechanism is supported by providing login and password in the URL of the Webhook like this: https://myLogin:myPassword@my_server/foo.

If you provide additional properties to your SonarScanner using the pattern sonar.analysis.*, these properties will be automatically added to the section properties of the payload.

For example these additional parameters:

sonar-scanner -Dsonar.analysis.buildNumber=12345

Would add this to the payload:

"properties": {
  "sonar.analysis.buildNumber": "12345"
}

Was this page helpful?

© 2008-2024 SonarSource SA. All rights reserved. SONAR, SONARSOURCE, SONARLINT, SONARQUBE, SONARCLOUD, and CLEAN AS YOU CODE are trademarks of SonarSource SA.

Creative Commons License