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Настройка advanced setup for code scanning

You can configure advanced setup for a repository to find security vulnerabilities in your code using a highly customizable code scanning configuration.

Кто эту функцию можно использовать?

People with admin permissions to a repository, or the security manager role for the repository, can configure code scanning for that repository. People with write permissions to a repository can also configure code scanning, but only by creating a workflow file or manually uploading a SARIF file.

Code scanning доступен для всех общедоступных репозиториев на GitHub.com. Чтобы использовать code scanning в частном репозитории, принадлежащем организации, необходима лицензия на GitHub Advanced Security. Дополнительные сведения см. в разделе Сведения о GitHub Advanced Security.

About advanced setup for code scanning

Advanced setup for code scanning is helpful when you need to customize your code scanning. By creating and editing a workflow file, you can define how to build compiled languages, choose which queries to run, select the languages to scan, use a matrix build, and more. You also have access to all the options for controlling workflows, for example: changing the scan schedule, defining workflow triggers, specifying specialist runners to use. For more information about GitHub Actions workflows, see "About workflows."

You can also configure code scanning with third-party tools. For more information, see "Configuring code scanning using third-party actions."

If you run code scanning using multiple configurations, the same alert will sometimes be generated by more than one configuration. If an alert comes from multiple configurations, you can view the status of the alert for each configuration on the alert page. For more information, see "About code scanning alerts."

If you do not need a highly customizable code scanning configuration, consider using default setup for code scanning. For more information on eligibility for default setup, see "Configuring default setup for code scanning."

Prerequisites

Your repository is eligible for advanced setup if it meets these requirements.

  • It uses CodeQL-supported languages or you plan to generate code scanning results with a third-party tool.
  • GitHub Actions are enabled.
  • It is publicly visible, or GitHub Advanced Security is enabled.

Configuring advanced setup for code scanning with CodeQL

You can customize your CodeQL analysis by creating and editing a workflow file. Selecting advanced setup generates a basic workflow file for you to customize using standard workflow syntax and specifying options for the CodeQL action. See "About workflows" and "Customizing your advanced setup for code scanning."

Using actions to run code scanning will use minutes. For more information, see "About billing for GitHub Actions."

  1. On GitHub.com, navigate to the main page of the repository.

  2. Under your repository name, click Settings. If you cannot see the "Settings" tab, select the dropdown menu, then click Settings.

    Screenshot of a repository header showing the tabs. The "Settings" tab is highlighted by a dark orange outline.

  3. In the "Security" section of the sidebar, click Code security and analysis.

  4. Scroll down to the "Code scanning" section, select Set up , then click Advanced.

    Note: If you are switching from default setup to advanced setup, in the "Code scanning" section, select , then click Switch to advanced. In the pop-up window that appears, click Disable CodeQL.

    Screenshot of the "Code scanning" section of "Code security and analysis" settings. The "Advanced setup" button is highlighted with an orange outline.

  5. To customize how code scanning scans your code, edit the workflow.

    Generally, you can commit the CodeQL analysis workflow without making any changes to it. However, many of the third-party workflows require additional configuration, so read the comments in the workflow before committing.

    For more information, see "Customizing your advanced setup for code scanning" and "CodeQL code scanning for compiled languages."

  6. Click Commit changes... to display the commit changes form.

    Screenshot of the form to create a new file. To the right of the file name, a green button, labeled "Commit changes...", is outlined in dark orange.

  7. In the commit message field, type a commit message.

  8. Choose whether you'd like to commit directly to the default branch, or create a new branch and start a pull request.

  9. Click Commit new file to commit the workflow file to the default branch or click Propose new file to commit the file to a new branch.

  10. If you created a new branch, click Create pull request and open a pull request to merge your change into the default branch.

In the suggested CodeQL analysis workflow, code scanning is configured to analyze your code each time you either push a change to the default branch or any protected branches, or raise a pull request against the default branch. As a result, code scanning will now commence.

The on:pull_request and on:push triggers for code scanning are each useful for different purposes. See "Customizing your advanced setup for code scanning" and Triggering a workflow."

For information on bulk enablement, see "Configuring advanced setup for code scanning with CodeQL at scale."

Configuring code scanning using third-party actions

GitHub Enterprise Cloud includes starter workflows for third-party actions, as well as the CodeQL action. Using a starter workflow is much easier than writing a workflow unaided.

Using actions to run code scanning will use minutes. For more information, see "About billing for GitHub Actions."

  1. On GitHub.com, navigate to the main page of the repository.

  2. Under your repository name, click Actions.

    Screenshot of the tabs for the "github/docs" repository. The "Actions" tab is highlighted with an orange outline.

  3. If the repository has already at least one workflow configured and running, click New workflow to display starter workflows. If there are currently no workflows configured for the repository, go to the next step.

    Screenshot of the Actions tab for a repository. The "New workflow" button is outlined in dark orange.

  4. In the "Choose a workflow" or "Get started with GitHub Actions" view, scroll down to the "Security" category and click Configure under the workflow you want to configure. You may need to click View all to find the security workflow you want to configure.

    Screenshot of the Security category of starter workflows. The Configure button and "View all" link are highlighted with an orange outline.

  5. Follow any instructions in the workflow to customize it to your needs. For more general assistance about workflows, click Documentation on the right pane of the workflow page.

    Screenshot showing a starter workflow file open for editing. The "Documentation" button is highlighted with an orange outline.

    For more information, see "Using starter workflows" and "Customizing your advanced setup for code scanning."

Next steps

After your workflow runs successfully at least once, you are ready to start examining and resolving code scanning alerts. For more information on code scanning alerts, see "About code scanning alerts" and "Managing code scanning alerts for your repository."

Learn how code scanning runs behave as checks on pull requests, see "Triaging code scanning alerts in pull requests."

You can find detailed information about your code scanning configuration, including timestamps for each scan and the percentage of files scanned, on the tool status page. For more information, see "About the tool status page for code scanning."

Further reading