Skip to content
This repository has been archived by the owner on Mar 21, 2024. It is now read-only.

esbenbach/coverity-vsts-task

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

35 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Archived

Notice: Synopsys now provides an official extension (https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=synopsys-coverity.synopsys-coverity-azure-devops) which is LIKELY better than this one I made. We still use this one extensively, but will probably move away from it after a while.

Coverity Azure DevOps Build Task

Please note that this is very much a work-in-progress and it is only built to facilitate the needs I/We have at work (http://www.infosoft.no). Feel free to make comments, suggestion, PRs etc, but don't expect too much in the way of "bug fixing" if you discover a bug.

The repository is called vsts-task because that was the name of Azure DevOps at the time of creation (and I should have known it would change name again and just not used that name, but anyway, there you have it).

Installing the Coverity Build Task into Azure DevOps

  • Install Node.js
  • Install the tfx-cli using npm install -g tfx-cli
  • Clone the repository git clone https://github.com/esbenbach/coverity-vsts-task.git
  • Login to vsts with tfx tfx login -u https://youraccount.visualstudio.com/DefaultCollection -t "PERSONALACCESSTOKEN" - its possible to use username or password instead of the access token read the tfx --help to figure out how
  • Upload the task to vsts tfx build tasks upload --task-path ./coverity-vsts-task/CoverityBuild

Using the Coverity Build Task

  • Edit a build definition and add the task "Coverity Build"
  • Fill out all the required parameters, note that aside from the solution path, all paths relates to the agent where the build is executed, so if you have multiple agents you probably need to either install coverity in a specific location or enforce the build to run on a specific agent.

Regarding MSBuild

Since this is my very first attempt to do a vsts task, i took the quick way around and just used a third party script to find msbuild, and I choose to just use the arguments for MSBuild that I need. It should be relatively easy to augment it if you want, but ideally it should somehow wrap the VSBuild task if that is possible (not sure it is). I might look into that in the future.

How it works

The task works by going through the following steps:

  • cov-build
  • cov-import-scm (if enabled)
  • cov-analyze
  • cov-commit-defects

At each step there are a series of default options passed to the cli tool, and it is possible to pass along custom arguments.

If system.debug is set to true (diagnostics is enabled), the task will output the commands it is trying to execute to help in troubleshooting.

The cov-build wraps around a sln file - im guessing that any sort of msbuild type reference will work, but I actually don't know.

Assumptions

This assumes that Coverity is installed on the build server and available in the Path, it also assumes that the build server has access to a key file so defects can be comitted to coverity connect.