Warning
Rust support for CodeQL is experimental. No support is offered. QL and database interfaces will change and break without notice or deprecation periods.
If you don't have the semmle-code repo you may need to install Bazel manually, e.g. from https://github.com/bazelbuild/bazelisk.
This approach uses a released codeql version and is simpler to use for QL development. From anywhere under your semmle-code or codeql directory you can run:
bazel run @codeql//rust:installYou can use shorter versions of the above command:
bazel run //rust:install # if under the `codeql` checkout
bazel run rust:install # if at the root of the `codeql` checkout
bazel run :install # if at the `rust` directory of the `codeql` checkoutYou now need to create a per-user CodeQL configuration file and specify the option:
--search-path PATH/TO/semmle-code/ql
(wherever the codeql checkout is on your system)
You can now use the Rust extractor e.g. to run Rust tests from the command line or in VSCode.
This approach allows you to build a Rust extractor with a CLI built from source. From your semmle-code directory run:
./build target/intree/codeql-rustYou can now invoke it directly, for example to run some tests:
./target/intree/codeql-rust/codeql test run ql/rust/ql/test/PATH/TO/TEST/TODO
If you make changes to either
ast-generator/, orschema/*.py
you'll need to regenerate code. You can do so running
bazel run @codeql//rust/codegenSometimes, especially if resolving conflicts on generated files, you might need to run
bazel run @codeql//rust/codegen -- --forcefor code generation to succeed.