Versions Compared
Key
- This line was added.
- This line was removed.
- Formatting was changed.
This guide will show you how to integrate Kiuwan with Atlassian Bamboo.
Contents:
Table of Contents |
---|
Introduction to the integration with Atlassian Bamboo
Kiuwan analyses can be integrated into the continuous integration process with Atlassian Bamboo. The analyses can run completely automated to enable continuous code security. It is even possible to automatically enforce your security policies.
In continuous integration and continuous delivery (CI/CD) environments, it is very common (and recommendablerecommended) to ensure the security and quality of the software under development with an automated solution.
Kiuwan allows you to do baseline or delivery analysis according to the user needs as a step in the build plan defined in Bamboo.
The A Kiuwan analysis will be executed by a Bamboo agent. It This could be a remote agent or the default agent running on the Bamboo server machine.
Image Modified
Configure the Bamboo agents
Before you start:
- Make sure that any agent that which can potentially run a Kiuwan analysis as part of a build plan has the Kiuwan Local Analyzer (KLA) installed on the same machine machine .
- Configure a Kiuwan agent-specific capability in the agent.
For example, if you install your KLA in C:\KiuwanLocalAnalyzer, you can configure a new agent-specific capability as follows:
Go to the Bamboo agents admin page and select the agent you want to configure
Click Add capability
Select Executable from the Capability type dropdown
Select Command from the Type dropdown
Give the new capability a unique label to identify it (KLA for example)
Specify the complete absolute path to the KLA command (C:\KiuwanLocalAnalyzer\bin\agent.cmd for example)
Image Modified
Image Modified
Info |
---|
Repeat this operation for all agents that will run Kiuwan analyses. The more agents you have with the KLA capability, the more analyses you can run in parallel. This will depend on the number of applications you have under continuous development and your build/analysis strategy. |
Once you have all your agents configured, you can create (or modify) build plans to run Kiuwan analyses.
Create Bamboo builds for projects to analyze
Build plans in Bamboo are created for a specific project. Create one, or select an existing one to configure it.
Configure Kiuwan credentials
First, you have to configure the Kiuwan credentials variables.
Go to the Variables tab and create 2 two variables called KiuwanUser and KiuwanPassword. For example:
Image Modified
Alternatively, you could create a global variable for your credentials. In that case, the same credentials will be used across your build plans. It is up to you what you want to do.
Create an analysis stage
Create a stage to add a Kiuwan analysis job to it or add a job in an existing stage (like as we have done here in the default stage).
In Job definition, search for the KLA capability and specify that it must ‘exist’. This configuration ensures that the job is sent to an agent that has the KLA installed.
Then go to the Tasks tab to configure the Kiuwan analysis task. Kiuwan needs the source code to analyze it, so make sure that there is a ‘Source Code Checkout’ task before anything else.
After that, at lastFinally, add a Script task to run the Kiuwan analysis. Configure more tasks (like build) in this stage or just use it only for the analysis.
- Select the new Script task and add a description (in our case Kiuwan baseline analysis, because that is what it is going to do)
- Select the Windows PowerShell, if your agents are Windows-based (they could be Linux based as well. In that case. For Linux-based agents, you have to specify a different agent capability and here select Shell).
- Next, select Inline in script location (you could have a file in your repository with the script to run).
- Finally, enter the following script code in the Script body text area:
This is a PowerShell example, using some PowerShell commandlets. You can come up with create a similar script for Linux shells mimicking the functionality.
Code Block | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ||||||||
$project_name = "${bamboo.planName}".Split("-")[0].Trim() agent -n "$project_name" -s ${bamboo.build.working.directory}\src -l "Bamboo build ${bamboo.buildNumber}" -c --user ${bamboo.KiuwanUser} --pass ${bamboo.KiuwanPassword} -wr exit $lastexitcode |
Image Modified
Alternative Kiuwan analysis
.: Delivery
Kiuwan can run 2 two different types of analysis: baseline and delivery. In the previous example, the script runs a baseline analysis. If you want to run a delivery analysis your script will look something like the following:
Code Block | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ||||||||
$project_name = "${bamboo.planName}".Split("-")[0].Trim() $change_request = "New CR" agent -n $project_name -s ${bamboo.build.working.directory}\src -l "${bamboo.shortPlanKey}${bamboo.shortJobKey}-${bamboo.buildNumber}" -as completeDelivery -crs resolved -cr ${bamboo.planRepository.branch} -bn ${bamboo.planRepository.branch} --user ${bamboo.KiuwanUser} --pass ${bamboo.KiuwanPassword} -wr exit $lastexitcode |
A good use case could be to run a Delivery analysis for every pull request, so the policy is applied before the merge. The merge can be blocked if the pull request doesn’t pass the Kiuwan audit.
Run build plans
You can run the build plan manually or define different triggers and strategies to run them automatically.
What you do will depend on your development process.
You can follow the Kiuwan task execution on-line or check the logs after execution: