Publish Coverity report along your documentation - up-to-date at every build. Include comments and other special data in the same table and draw some nice graphs to showcase the quality.
Coverity's reporting capabilities enable you to export data into separate documentation. While this might be preferred, it is also detached from your software documentation. Another lack is that it does not include comments or any other special fields. That means you can end up with a huge amount of intentionally triaged defects, without any explanation why they are intentional. Because of that, you cannot link your explanations for actions to that report and numbers could mean just anything. This plugin should enable simple and seamless Coverity reporting integration into existing Sphinx documentation. Generating a reStructuredText table of defects was one option, but that allows changing before it is rendered, so to provide a more trustworthy path, this plugin retrieves the data through Coverity API and generates/renders documentation via Sphinx without intermediate (editable) artifacts.
pip install mlx.coverity
The conf.py file contains the documentation configuration for your project. This file needs to be equipped in order to configure the Coverity plugin.
First, the plugin needs to be enabled in the extensions variable:
extensions = [ 'mlx.coverity', ... ]
Python variable coverity_credentials should be defined in order to override the default configuration of the Coverity plugin.
Example of custom credentials for the plugin:
coverity_credentials = {
'hostname': 'scan.coverity.com',
'username': 'myusername',
'password': 'mypassword',
'stream': 'some_coverity_stream',
'snapshot': '1',
}
Snapshot is optional. When an empty string is given, the last snapshot is used.
The plugin can be linked to Traceability extension. This means that this plugin can link to traceability items in the description of Coverity defects by creating a reference in the docnode. Python variable TRACEABILITY_ITEM_ID_REGEX should be defined in order to override the default regular expression below. An empty string as regex will disable this feature.
TRACEABILITY_ITEM_ID_REGEX = r"([A-Z_]+-[A-Z0-9_]+)"
If the item ID matched by TRACEABILITY_ITEM_ID_REGEX is incorrect, e.g. it does not exist in the collection of traceability items, you can configure the plugin to link to the desired item ID instead. Add the item ID returned by Coverity as a key to the Python dictionary TRACEABILITY_ITEM_ID_REGEX and the desired item ID as value.
TRACEABILITY_ITEM_RELINK = {
"STATIC_DEVIATE-MISRA_RULE_1_0": "STATIC_DEVIATE-MISRA_1_0",
}
The plugin itself holds a default config that can be used for any Coverity project:
coverity_credentials = {
'hostname': 'scan.coverity.com',
'username': 'reporter',
'password': 'coverity',
'stream': 'some_coverity_stream',
}
TRACEABILITY_ITEM_ID_REGEX = r"([A-Z_]+-[A-Z0-9_]+)"
TRACEABILITY_ITEM_RELINK = {}
This default configuration, which is built into the plugin, can be overridden through the conf.py of your project.
Inside your reStructuredText file you can call a block .. coverity-list:, which will generate the table with title and defined columns. For example, to display CID, Classification, Action and Comment columns, while filtering classification items with value Bug, you should use the following snippet:
.. coverity-list:: Custom table title
:col: CID,Classification,Action,Comment
:widths: 10 20 20 50
:classification: Bug
The plugin will then automatically replace this block with the table queried from the Coverity server.
You can also call this block .. coverity-list: to generate a pie chart. For example, to label the amount of items classified as Intentional and the amount of items classified as Pending or Unclassified, while filtering classification items, you should use the following snippet:
.. coverity-list:: Custom chart title
:chart: classification:Intentional,Pending+Unclassified
:classification: Bug,Intentional,Pending,Unclassified
The plugin allows the use of both display options, col`and `chart, at the same time as well. In that case, they share all filtering options.
The directive coverity-list is configurable with several options to provide better granularity and filtering of the displayed information. They are all optional. All option names shall be encapsulated by a colon and almost all option values shall be in CSV format (comma-separated without any spaces). All options are documented below, starting with the display options and followed by the filter options:
By default, the Coverity defects are listed in a table, of which the columns can be configured with the col option. If the chart option is used and the col option is not, only a pie chart is generated.
col: | multiple arguments (CSV format) Specify column names of the table. The default value is CID,Classification,Action,Comment. They should match the columns inside Coverity. Possible Keywords are (but not limited, since Coverity has the option to create custom names):
|
---|---|
widths: | multiple arguments (space-separated) Column widths as a percentage value (integer). This could come in handy to fit the table on a PDF page. The LaTeX package longtable provides nice table continuation across multiple pages. |
chart: | optional This optional, second display option draws a pie chart that visualizes the amount of defects for each allowed <<attribute>> option. Firstly, the attribute can be specified, followed by a colon. The default attribute is classification. Secondly, you have two options. Either you specify a list of attribute values, comma-separated, or even plus-sign-separated for a merge into the same slice. Else, you define the minimum threshold amount of defects with the same attribute value that needs to be reached for them to be grouped together into a slice. All other defects get labeled as "Other". The example below results in a pie chart that visualizes the most prevalent MISRA violations with a grouping threshold of 50 items: .. coverity-list:: Chart of the most prevalent MISRA violations
:chart: checker:50
:checker: MISRA |
All filter options accept multiple arguments (CSV format).
classification: | Filtering by classification based on the text following the attribute. The text can be anything you desire, but the default list includes:
|
---|---|
checker: | Filtering by checker based on the text following the attribute. The text can be anything you desire. Regular expressions work for this attribute, e.g. MISRA. |
impact: | Filter for only these impacts. |
kind: | Filter for only these kinds. |
classification: | Filter for only these classifications. |
action: | Filter for only these actions. |
component: | Filter for only these components. |
cwe: | Filter for only these CWE ratings. |
cid: | Filter only these CIDs. |
We welcome any contributions to this plugin. Do not be shy and open a pull request. We will try to do our best to help you include your contribution to our repository. Keep in mind that reporting a bug or requesting a feature is also a nice gesture and considered as contribution, even if you do not have development skills to implement it.
To contribute to the code or documentation, you may want to run tests and build the documentation. Firstly, clone the repository.
To run tests and checks we use tox.
# to install tox
pip3 install tox
# to run tests
tox
To build the example documentation locally, you will need to install the package and set your environment, see help.
# install current package locally and its dependencies
pip3 install --editable .
# define environment variables, needed by example/conf.py
# or store them in a .env file for a more permanent solution
export COVERITY_USERNAME='yourusername'
export COVERITY_PASSWORD='yourpassword'
export COVERITY_STREAM='yourstream'
export COVERITY_SNAPSHOT=''
# build documentation with Sphinx in a Tox environment
tox -e html