About CodeQL workspaces
Note
This article describes the features available with the version of the CodeQL action and associated CodeQL CLI bundle included in the initial release of this version of GitHub Enterprise Server. If your enterprise uses a more recent version of the CodeQL action, see the GitHub Enterprise Cloud version of this article for information on the latest features. For information on using the latest version, see "Configuring code scanning for your appliance."
You use a CodeQL workspace when you want to group multiple CodeQL packs together. A typical use case for a CodeQL workspace is to develop a set of CodeQL library and query packs that are mutually dependent. For more information on CodeQL packs, see Customizing analysis with CodeQL packs.
The main benefit of a CodeQL workspace is that it makes it easier for you to develop and maintain multiple CodeQL packs. When you use a CodeQL workspace, all the CodeQL packs in the workspace are available as source dependencies for each other when you run a CodeQL command that resolves queries. This makes it easier to develop, maintain, and publish multiple, related CodeQL packs.
In most cases, you should store the CodeQL workspace and the CodeQL packs contained in it in one git repository. This makes it easier to share your CodeQL development environment.
The codeql-workspace.yml
file
A CodeQL workspace is defined by a codeql-workspace.yml
yaml file. This file contains a provide
block, and optionally ignore
and registries
blocks.
-
The
provide
block contains a list of glob patterns that define the CodeQL packs that are available in the workspace. -
The
ignore
block contains a list of glob patterns that define CodeQL packs that are not available in the workspace. -
The
registries
block contains a list of GHES URLs and package patterns that control which container registry is used for publishing CodeQL packs. For more information, see Publishing and using CodeQL packs.
Each entry in the provide
or ignore
section must map to the location of a qlpack.yml
file. All glob patterns are defined relative to the directory that contains the workspace file. For a list of patterns accepted in this file, see @actions/glob.
For example, the following codeql-workspace.yml
file defines a workspace that contains all the CodeQL packs recursively found in the codeql-packs
directory, except for the packs in the experimental
directory. The registries
block specifies that codeql/\*
packs should be downloaded from https://ghcr.io/v2/
, which is GitHub’s default container registry. All other packs should be downloaded from and published to the registry at GHE_HOSTNAME
.
provide:
- "*/codeql-packs/**/qlpack.yml"
ignore:
- "*/codeql-packs/**/experimental/**/qlpack.yml"
registries:
- packages: 'codeql/*'
url: https://ghcr.io/v2/
- packages: '*'
url: https://containers.GHE_HOSTNAME/v2/
To verify that your codeql-workspace.yml
file includes the CodeQL packs that you expect, run the codeql pack ls
command in the same directory as your workspace. The result of the command is a list of all CodeQL packs in the workspace.
Source dependencies
Source dependencies are CodeQL packs that are resolved from the local file system outside of the CodeQL package cache. These dependencies can be in the same CodeQL workspace, or specified as a path option using the --additional-packs
argument. When you compile and run queries locally, source dependencies override any dependencies found in the CodeQL package cache as well as version constraints defined in the qlpack.yml
. All references to CodeQL packs in the same workspace are resolved as source dependencies.
This is particularly useful in the following situations:
-
One of the dependencies of the query pack you are running is not yet published. Resolving from source is the only way to reference that pack.
-
You are making changes to multiple packs at the same time and want to test them together. Resolving from source ensures that you are using the version of the pack with your changes in it.
CodeQL workspaces and query resolution
All CodeQL packs in a workspace are available as source dependencies for each other when you run any CodeQL command that resolves queries or packs. For example, when you run codeql pack install
in a pack directory in a workspace, any dependency that can be found in the workspace will be used instead of downloading that dependency to the package cache and adding it to the codeql-pack.lock.yml
file. For more information, see Creating and working with CodeQL packs.
Similarly, when you publish a CodeQL query pack to the GitHub container registry using codeql pack publish
the command will always use the dependencies from the workspace instead of using dependencies found in the local package cache.
This ensures that any local changes you make to a query library in a dependency are automatically reflected in any query packs you publish from that workspace.
Example
Consider the following codeql-workspace.yml
file:
provide:
- "**/qlpack.yml"
And the following CodeQL library pack qlpack.yml
file in the workspace:
name: my-company/my-library
library: true
version: 1.0.0
And the following CodeQL query pack qlpack.yml
file in the workspace:
name: my-company/my-queries
version: 1.0.0
dependencies:
my-company/my-library: "*"
codeql/cpp-all: ~0.2.0
Notice that the dependencies
block for the CodeQL query pack, my-company/my-queries
, specifies "*"
as the version of the library pack. Since the library pack is already defined as a source dependency in codeql-workspace.yml
, the library pack’s content is always resolved from inside the workspace. Any version constraint you define will be ignored in this case. We recommend that you use "*"
for source dependencies to make it clear that the version is inherited from the workspace.
When you execute codeql pack install
from the query pack directory, an appropriate version of codeql/cpp-all
is downloaded to the local package cache. Also, a codeql-pack.lock.yml
file is created that contains the resolved version of codeql/cpp-all
. The lock file won’t contain an entry for my-company/my-library
since it is resolved from source dependencies. The codeql-pack.lock.yml
file will look something like this:
dependencies:
codeql/cpp-all:
version: 0.2.2
When you execute codeql pack publish
from the query pack directory, the codeql/cpp-all
dependency from the package cache and the my-company/my-library
from the workspace are bundled with my-company/my-queries
and published to the GitHub container registry.
Using ${workspace}
as a version range in qlpack.yml
files
CodeQL packs in a workspace can use the special ${workspace}
, ~${workspace}
, and ^${workspace}
version range placeholders. These placeholders indicate that this pack depends on the version of the specified pack that is currently in the workspace. This placeholder is typically used for dependencies inside of library packs to ensure that when they are published, the dependencies in their qlpack.yml
file reflect the state of the workspace when they were published.
Example
Consider the following two library packs in the same workspace:
name: my-company/my-library
library: true
version: 1.2.3
dependencies:
my-company/my-library2: ${workspace}
name: my-company/my-library2
library: true
version: 4.5.6
When my-company/my-library
is published to the GitHub container registry, the version of the my-company/my-library2
dependency in the published qlpack.yml
file will be written as 4.5.6
.
Similarly, if the dependency is my-company/my-library2: ^${workspace}
in the source pack, and then the pack is published, the version of the my-company/my-library2
dependency in the published qlpack.yml
file will be written as ^4.5.6
, indicating that versions >= 4.5.6
and < 5.0.0
are all compatible with this library pack.
If the dependency is my-company/my-library2: ~${workspace}
in the source pack, and then the pack is published, the version of the my-company/my-library2
dependency in the published qlpack.yml
file will be written as ~4.5.6
, indicating that versions >= 4.5.6
and < 4.6.0
are all compatible with this library pack.