lint/docs/run-linter-locally.md
Marco Ferrari ac4b767bd7
Reduce duplication in CI and CD workflows (#4982)
* Reduce duplication in CI and CD workflows

* Fix indentation in README

* Load token from file

* Fix instructions

* Ignore test leftovers
2023-12-12 18:53:48 +00:00

4.5 KiB

Run super-linter outside GitHub Actions

If you want to run super-linter outside GitHub Actions, you need a container runtime engine to run the super-linter container image.

Run super-linter Locally

You can run the container locally with the following configuration options to run your code:

docker run \
  -e ACTIONS_RUNNER_DEBUG=true \
  -e RUN_LOCAL=true \
  -v /path/to/local/codebase:/tmp/lint \
  --rm \
  ghcr.io/super-linter/super-linter:latest

This example uses the latest container image version. If you're trying to reproduce an issue, or running super-linter as part of your CI pipeline, we recommend that you refer to a specific version instead.

Notes:

  • To run against a single file you can use: docker run -e RUN_LOCAL=true -e USE_FIND_ALGORITHM=true -v /path/to/local/codebase/file:/tmp/lint/file ghcr.io/super-linter/super-linter
  • You need to pass the RUN_LOCAL option to bypass some of the GitHub Actions checks, as well as the mapping of your local codebase to /tmp/lint.
  • If you want to override the /tmp/lint folder, you can set the DEFAULT_WORKSPACE environment variable to point to the folder you'd prefer to scan.
  • You can add as many configuration options as needed. Configuration options are documented in the README.

Azure

Check out this article

GitLab

Check out this snippet and this Guided Exploration: GitLab CI CD Extension for Super-Linter

Run on Codespaces and Visual Studio Code

This repository provides a DevContainer for remote development.

Share Environment variables between environments

To avoid duplication if you run super-linter both locally and in other environements, such as CI, you can define configuration options once, and load them accordingly:

  1. Create a configuration file for super-linter super-linter.env. For example:

    VALIDATE_ALL_CODEBASE=true
    
  2. Load the super-linter configuration file when running outside GitHub Actions:

    docker run --rm \
        -e RUN_LOCAL=true \
        --env-file ".github/super-linter.env" \
        -v "$(pwd)":/tmp/lint \
        ghcr.io/super-linter/super-linter:latest
    
  3. Load the super-linter configuration file when running in GitHub Actions by adding the following step to the GitHub Actions workflow that runs super-linter, after checking out your repository and before running super-linter:

    - name: Load super-linter configuration
      run: cat .github/super-linter.env >> "$GITHUB_ENV"
    

Build the container image and run the test suite locally

To run the build and test process locally, do the following:

  1. Create a fine-grained GitHub personal access token.

  2. Create a file to store the personal access token on your machine:

    touch .github-personal-access-token
    

    The file to store the personal access token is ignored by Git.

  3. Run the build process:

    make
    

To avoid invalidating the build cache, and reuse it, you can set build metadata to arbitrary values before running make:

BUILD_DATE=2023-12-12T09:32:05Z \
BUILD_REVISION=83c16f63caa9d432df4519efb4c58a56e2190bd6 \
BUILD_VERSION=83c16f63caa9d432df4519efb4c58a56e2190bd6 \
make

Run the test suite against an arbitrary super-linter container image

You can run the test suite against an arbitrary super-linter container image.

Here is an example that runs the test suite against the v5.4.3 container image version.

CONTAINER_IMAGE_ID="ghcr.io/super-linter/super-linter:v5.4.3" \
BUILD_DATE="2023-10-17T17:00:53Z" \
BUILD_REVISION=b0d1acee1f8050d1684a28ddbf8315f81d084fe9 \
BUILD_VERSION=b0d1acee1f8050d1684a28ddbf8315f81d084fe9 \
make docker-pull test

Initialize the BUILD_DATE, BUILD_REVISION, and BUILD_VERSION variables with the values for that specific container image version. You can get these values from the build log for that version.

Get the list of available build targets

To get the list of the available Make targets, run the following command:

make help