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Add CodeQL Workflow for Code Security Analysis #390
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Add CodeQL Workflow for Code Security Analysis This pull request introduces a CodeQL workflow to enhance the security analysis of our repository. CodeQL is a powerful static analysis tool that helps identify and mitigate security vulnerabilities in our codebase. By integrating this workflow into our GitHub Actions, we can proactively identify and address potential issues before they become security threats. We added a new CodeQL workflow file (.github/workflows/codeql.yml) that - Runs on every push and pull request to the main branch. - Excludes queries with a high false positive rate or low-severity findings. - Does not display results for third-party code, focusing only on our own codebase. Testing: To validate the functionality of this workflow, we have run several test scans on the codebase and reviewed the results. The workflow successfully compiles the project, identifies issues, and provides actionable insights while reducing noise by excluding certain queries and third-party code. Deployment: Once this pull request is merged, the CodeQL workflow will be active and automatically run on every push and pull request to the main branch. To view the results of these code scans, please follow these steps: 1. Under the repository name, click on the Security tab. 2. In the left sidebar, click Code scanning alerts. Additional Information: - You can further customize the workflow to adapt to your specific needs by modifying the workflow file. - For more information on CodeQL and how to interpret its results, refer to the GitHub documentation and the CodeQL documentation. Signed-off-by: Brian <[email protected]>
Add CodeQL Workflow for Code Security Analysis This pull request introduces a CodeQL workflow to enhance the security analysis of our repository. CodeQL is a powerful static analysis tool that helps identify and mitigate security vulnerabilities in our codebase. By integrating this workflow into our GitHub Actions, we can proactively identify and address potential issues before they become security threats. We added a new CodeQL workflow file (.github/workflows/codeql.yml) that - Runs on every pull request (functionality to run on every push to main branches is included as a comment for convenience). - Runs daily. - Excludes queries with a high false positive rate or low-severity findings. - Does not display results for git submodules, focusing only on our own codebase. Testing: To validate the functionality of this workflow, we have run several test scans on the codebase and reviewed the results. The workflow successfully compiles the project, identifies issues, and provides actionable insights while reducing noise by excluding certain queries and third-party code. Deployment: Once this pull request is merged, the CodeQL workflow will be active and automatically run on every push and pull request to the main branch. To view the results of these code scans, please follow these steps: 1. Under the repository name, click on the Security tab. 2. In the left sidebar, click Code scanning alerts. Additional Information: - You can further customize the workflow to adapt to your specific needs by modifying the workflow file. - For more information on CodeQL and how to interpret its results, refer to the GitHub documentation and the CodeQL documentation (https://codeql.github.com/ and https://codeql.github.com/docs/). Signed-off-by: Brian <[email protected]>
Add CodeQL Workflow for Code Security Analysis This pull request introduces a CodeQL workflow to enhance the security analysis of our repository. CodeQL is a powerful static analysis tool that helps identify and mitigate security vulnerabilities in our codebase. By integrating this workflow into our GitHub Actions, we can proactively identify and address potential issues before they become security threats. We added a new CodeQL workflow file (.github/workflows/codeql.yml) that - Runs on every pull request (functionality to run on every push to main branches is included as a comment for convenience). - Runs daily. - Excludes queries with a high false positive rate or low-severity findings. - Does not display results for git submodules, focusing only on our own codebase. Testing: To validate the functionality of this workflow, we have run several test scans on the codebase and reviewed the results. The workflow successfully compiles the project, identifies issues, and provides actionable insights while reducing noise by excluding certain queries and third-party code. Deployment: Once this pull request is merged, the CodeQL workflow will be active and automatically run on every push and pull request to the main branch. To view the results of these code scans, please follow these steps: 1. Under the repository name, click on the Security tab. 2. In the left sidebar, click Code scanning alerts. Additional Information: - You can further customize the workflow to adapt to your specific needs by modifying the workflow file. - For more information on CodeQL and how to interpret its results, refer to the GitHub documentation and the CodeQL documentation (https://codeql.github.com/ and https://codeql.github.com/docs/). Signed-off-by: Brian <[email protected]>
This pull request sets up GitHub code scanning for this repository. Once the scans have completed and the checks have passed, the analysis results for this pull request branch will appear on this overview. Once you merge this pull request, the 'Security' tab will show more code scanning analysis results (for example, for the default branch). Depending on your configuration and choice of analysis tool, future pull requests will be annotated with code scanning analysis results. For more information about GitHub code scanning, check out the documentation. |
Add CodeQL Workflow for Code Security Analysis This pull request introduces a CodeQL workflow to enhance the security analysis of our repository. CodeQL is a powerful static analysis tool that helps identify and mitigate security vulnerabilities in our codebase. By integrating this workflow into our GitHub Actions, we can proactively identify and address potential issues before they become security threats. We added a new CodeQL workflow file (.github/workflows/codeql.yml) that - Runs on every pull request (functionality to run on every push to main branches is included as a comment for convenience). - Runs daily. - Excludes queries with a high false positive rate or low-severity findings. - Does not display results for git submodules, focusing only on our own codebase. Testing: To validate the functionality of this workflow, we have run several test scans on the codebase and reviewed the results. The workflow successfully compiles the project, identifies issues, and provides actionable insights while reducing noise by excluding certain queries and third-party code. Deployment: Once this pull request is merged, the CodeQL workflow will be active and automatically run on every push and pull request to the main branch. To view the results of these code scans, please follow these steps: 1. Under the repository name, click on the Security tab. 2. In the left sidebar, click Code scanning alerts. Additional Information: - You can further customize the workflow to adapt to your specific needs by modifying the workflow file. - For more information on CodeQL and how to interpret its results, refer to the GitHub documentation and the CodeQL documentation (https://codeql.github.com/ and https://codeql.github.com/docs/). Signed-off-by: Brian <[email protected]>
@travisg Pinging to check in on a possible followup to this PR? |
Looks pretty interesting, giving it a check over put probably worth taking. |
Obvious thing is to try to increase the number of architectures it runs tests on. Is it specifically tied to one toolchain? I see it's using an external arm embedded toolchain. |
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Looks like a good start, though I think running every day is a bit much right now. Comments inline.
# push: | ||
# branches: [ "main", "master" ] | ||
schedule: | ||
- cron: '0 0 * * *' |
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I noticed a change switched it from on push to what appears to be nightly. Is there a reason for this? On push sounds like a generally better default.
submodules: recursive | ||
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- name: arm-none-eabi-gcc GNU Arm Embedded Toolchain | ||
uses: carlosperate/[email protected] |
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This is fine for now, but we should figure out how to extend this to additional arches by using different toolchains, preferably the ones that LK uses for its own builds.
@@ -0,0 +1,3 @@ | |||
#!/usr/bin/env bash | |||
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make -j$(nproc) lm3s6965evb-test |
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Suggestion: have the target it builds passed in to this script and put the lm3s6965evb in the .yml file.
Summary
This pull request introduces a CodeQL workflow to enhance the security analysis of this repository.
What is CodeQL
CodeQL is a static analysis tool that helps identify and mitigate security vulnerabilities. It is primarily intra-function but does provide some support for inter-function analysis. By integrating CodeQL into a GitHub Actions workflow, it can proactively identify and address potential issues before they become security threats.
For more information on CodeQL and how to interpret its results, refer to the GitHub documentation and the CodeQL documentation (https://codeql.github.com/ and https://codeql.github.com/docs/).
What this PR does
We added a new CodeQL workflow file (.github/workflows/codeql.yml) that
Validation
To validate the functionality of this workflow, we have run several test scans on the codebase and reviewed the results. The workflow successfully compiles the project, identifies issues, and provides actionable insights while reducing noise by excluding certain queries and third-party code.
Using the workflow results
If this pull request is merged, the CodeQL workflow will be automatically run on every push to the main branch and on every pull request to the main branch. To view the results of these code scans, follow these steps:
Is this a good idea?
We are researchers at Purdue University in the USA. We are studying the potential benefits and costs of using CodeQL on open-source repositories of embedded software.
We wrote up a report of our findings so far. The TL;DR is “CodeQL outperforms the other freely-available static analysis tools, with fairly low false positive rates and lots of real defects”. You can read about the report here: https://arxiv.org/abs/2310.00205
Review of engineering hazards
License: see the license at https://github.com/github/codeql-cli-binaries/blob/main/LICENSE.md:
False positives: We find that around 20% of errors are false positives, but that these FPs are polarized and only a few rules contribute to most FPs. We find that the top rules contributing to FPs are: cpp/uninitialized-local, cpp/missing-check-scanf, cpp/suspicious-pointer-scaling, cpp/unbounded-write, cpp/constant-comparison, and cpp/inconsistent-null-check. Adding a filter to filter out certain rules that contribute to a high FP rate can be done simply in the workflow file.