# 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: ```bash docker run \ -e LOG_LEVEL=DEBUG \ -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](../README.md#configure-super-linter). ### Azure Check out this [article](https://blog.tyang.org/2020/06/27/use-github-super-linter-in-azure-pipelines/) ### GitLab Check out this [snippet](https://gitlab.com/snippets/1988376) and this Guided Exploration: [GitLab CI CD Extension for Super-Linter](https://gitlab.com/guided-explorations/ci-cd-plugin-extensions/ci-cd-plugin-extension-github-action-super-linter) ### Run on Codespaces and Visual Studio Code This repository provides a DevContainer for [remote development](https://code.visualstudio.com/docs/remote/containers). ## 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: ```bash VALIDATE_ALL_CODEBASE=true ``` 1. Load the super-linter configuration file when running outside GitHub Actions: ```bash docker run --rm \ -e RUN_LOCAL=true \ --env-file ".github/super-linter.env" \ -v "$(pwd)":/tmp/lint \ ghcr.io/super-linter/super-linter:latest ``` 1. Load the super-linter configuration file when running in GitHub Actions by adding the following step to the GitHub Actions workflow that runs super-linter, after checking out your repository and before running super-linter: ```yaml - name: Load super-linter configuration run: cat .github/super-linter.env >> "$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](https://docs.github.com/en/authentication/keeping-your-account-and-data-secure/managing-your-personal-access-tokens#creating-a-fine-grained-personal-access-token). 1. Create a file to store the personal access token on your machine: ```bash touch .github-personal-access-token ``` The file to store the personal access token is ignored by Git. 1. Run the build process: ```bash make ``` To avoid invalidating the build cache, and reuse it, you can set build metadata to arbitrary values before running `make`: ```bash 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. ```shell 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: ```shell make help ```