This content describes the most recent release of the CodeQL CLI. For more information about this release, see https://github.com/github/codeql-cli-binaries/releases.
To see details of the options available for this command in an earlier release, run the command with the --help
option in your terminal.
Synopsis
codeql database index-files --language=<lang> [--threads=<num>] [--ram=<MB>] [--extractor-option=<extractor-option-name=value>] <options>... -- <database>
Description
[Plumbing] Index standalone files with a given CodeQL extractor.
This command selects a set of files under the specified working directory, and applies the given extractor to them. By default, all files are selected. Typical invocations will specify options to restrict the set of included files.
The --include
, --exclude
, and --prune
options all take glob
patterns, which can use the following wildcard characters:
- A single "?" matches any character other than a forward/backward slash;
- A single "*" matches any number of characters other than a forward/backward slash;
- The pattern "**" matches zero or more complete directory components.
Primary options
<database>
[Mandatory] Path to the CodeQL database under construction. This must have been prepared for extraction with codeql database init.
-l, --language=<lang>
[Mandatory] The extractor that should be used to index matching files.
-j, --threads=<num>
Ask the extractor to use this many threads. This option is passed to the extractor as a suggestion. If the CODEQL_THREADS environment variable is set, the environment variable value takes precedence over this option.
You can pass 0 to use one thread per core on the machine, or -N to leave N cores unused (except still use at least one thread).
-M, --ram=<MB>
Ask the extractor to use this much memory. This option is passed to the extractor as a suggestion. If the CODEQL_RAM environment variable is set, the environment variable value takes precedence over this option.
--working-dir=<dir>
[Advanced] The directory in which the specified command should be
executed. If this argument is not provided, the command is executed in
the value of --source-root
passed to codeql database create, if one exists. If no --source-root
argument is provided, the command is executed in the
current working directory.
Options to control extractor behavior
-O, --extractor-option=<extractor-option-name=value>
Set options for CodeQL extractors. extractor-option-name
should be of
the form extractor_name.group1.group2.option_name or
group1.group2.option_name. If extractor_option_name
starts with an
extractor name, the indicated extractor must declare the option
group1.group2.option_name. Otherwise, any extractor that declares the
option group1.group2.option_name will have the option set. value
can
be any string that does not contain a newline.
You can use this command-line option repeatedly to set multiple
extractor options. If you provide multiple values for the same extractor
option, the behaviour depends on the type that the extractor option
expects. String options will use the last value provided. Array options
will use all the values provided, in order. Extractor options specified
using this command-line option are processed after extractor options
given via --extractor-options-file
.
When passed to codeql database init or codeql database begin-tracing
, the options will only be
applied to the indirect tracing environment. If your workflow also makes
calls to
codeql database trace-command then the options also need to be passed there if desired.
See https://codeql.github.com/docs/codeql-cli/extractor-options for more information on CodeQL extractor options, including how to list the options declared by each extractor.
--extractor-options-file=<extractor-options-bundle-file>
Specify extractor option bundle files. An extractor option bundle file
is a JSON file (extension .json
) or YAML file (extension .yaml
or
.yml
) that sets extractor options. The file must have the top-level
map key 'extractor' and, under it, extractor names as second-level map
keys. Further levels of maps represent nested extractor groups, and
string and array options are map entries with string and array values.
Extractor option bundle files are read in the order they are specified.
If different extractor option bundle files specify the same extractor
option, the behaviour depends on the type that the extractor option
expects. String options will use the last value provided. Array options
will use all the values provided, in order. Extractor options specified
using this command-line option are processed before extractor options
given via --extractor-option
.
When passed to codeql database init or codeql database begin-tracing
, the options will only be
applied to the indirect tracing environment. If your workflow also makes
calls to
codeql database trace-command then the options also need to be passed there if desired.
See https://codeql.github.com/docs/codeql-cli/extractor-options for more information on CodeQL extractor options, including how to list the options declared by each extractor.
Options for limiting the set of indexed files
--include-extension=<.ext>
Include all files in the search directory tree that have the given
extension. Typically, you should include the dot before the extension.
For example, passing --include-extension .xml
will include all files
with the ".xml" extension. This option is incompatible with negated
--include
options.
--include=<glob>
Include all files and directories in the search directory tree that
match the given glob, using each file and directory's relative path
from the search directory. If the glob begins with a !
character, the
matching files and directories would instead be excluded.
--include
options are processed in order, with later options
overriding earlier ones. For example,
--include ** --include !sub/*.ts --include sub/main.*
would include
sub/main.ts
(because it is included by sub/main.*
), exclude
sub/index.ts
(because it is excluded by !sub/*.ts
), and include
sub/test.js
(because it is included by **
without being subsequently
excluded.)
--also-match=<glob>
Require all results to also match the given glob, using each file and
directory's relative path from the search directory. This option has
the same structure and the same interpretation as --include
but
specifies a separate sequence of globs that are applied in conjunction
with --include
.
--exclude=<glob>
Exclude all files and directories that match the given glob, using each
file and directory's relative path from the search directory. This
option overrides all include options. This option is incompatible with
negated --include
options.
--prune=<glob>
Exclude all files and directories that match the given glob, using each
file and directory's relative path from the search directory. This
option overrides all include options. This option is incompatible with
negated --include
options.
--size-limit=<bytes>
Exclude all files whose size exceeds the given limit. The size limit is in bytes, or in kibibytes (KiB) with the "k" suffix, in mebibytes (MiB) with the "m" suffix, and in gibibytes (GiB) with the "g" suffix. This option overrides all include options.
--total-size-limit=<bytes>
Make the command exit with an error if the combined size of all resolved files would exceed the given limit. The size limit is in bytes, or in kibibytes (KiB) with the "k" suffix, in mebibytes (MiB) with the "m" suffix, and in gibibytes (GiB) with the "g" suffix.
--[no-]follow-symlinks
Follow any symbolic links to their targets.
--[no-]find-any
Find at most one match (as opposed to all matches).
Available since v2.11.3
.
Common options
-h, --help
Show this help text.
-J=<opt>
[Advanced] Give option to the JVM running the command.
(Beware that options containing spaces will not be handled correctly.)
-v, --verbose
Incrementally increase the number of progress messages printed.
-q, --quiet
Incrementally decrease the number of progress messages printed.
--verbosity=<level>
[Advanced] Explicitly set the verbosity level to one of errors,
warnings, progress, progress+, progress++, progress+++. Overrides -v
and -q
.
--logdir=<dir>
[Advanced] Write detailed logs to one or more files in the given directory, with generated names that include timestamps and the name of the running subcommand.
(To write a log file with a name you have full control over, instead
give --log-to-stderr
and redirect stderr as desired.)