How to Install SonarQube on Ubuntu 18.04 LTS

SonarQube is an open source platform to continuously inspect code quality of applications. It is written in Java language and supports multiple databases. You can inspect code and check the health of an application for more than 20 programming languages including Java, C, C++, C#, PHP, and web languages like JavaScript, HTML and CSS. SonarQube can analyze source code, find security vulnerabilities, detect bugs and show the result on web-based dashboard. You can easily integrate SonarQube with Maven, Ant, Gradle, MSBuild, LDAP, Active Directory and GitHub.

In this tutorial, we will learn how to install SonarQube on an Ubuntu 18.04 LTS (Bionic Beaver) server.

Requirements

  • A server running Ubuntu 18.04.
  • A non-root user with sudo privileges.

Getting Started

Before starting, you will need to update your system with the latest version. You can do this by running the following command:

sudo apt-get update -y
sudo apt-get upgrade -y

Once your system is updated, restart the system to apply the changes.

Install Java

SonarQube is written in Java language, so you will need to install Java to your system. First, add the Java repository with the following command:

sudo add-apt-repository ppa:webupd8team/java

Next, update the repository and install Java with the following command:

sudo apt-get update -y
sudo apt-get install oracle-java8-installer -y

Once the Java is installed, check the Java version using the following command:

java -version

Output:

openjdk version "10.0.2" 2018-07-17
OpenJDK Runtime Environment (build 10.0.2+13-Ubuntu-1ubuntu0.18.04.3)
OpenJDK 64-Bit Server VM (build 10.0.2+13-Ubuntu-1ubuntu0.18.04.3, mixed mode)

Install and Configure PostgreSQL

By default, the latest version of PostgreSQL is not available in the Ubuntu 18.04 default repository. So you will need to add the PostgreSQL repository to your system.

You can do this with the following command:

sudo sh -c 'echo "deb http://apt.postgresql.org/pub/repos/apt/ `lsb_release -cs`-pgdg main" >> /etc/apt/sources.list.d/pgdg.list'
wget -q https://www.postgresql.org/media/keys/ACCC4CF8.asc -O - | sudo apt-key add -

Next, update the repository and install PostgreSQL with the following command:

sudo apt-get update -y
sudo apt-get install postgresql postgresql-contrib

Once the installation is completed, check the status of PostgreSQL with the following command:

sudo systemctl status postgresql

Output:

? postgresql.service - PostgreSQL RDBMS
 Loaded: loaded (/lib/systemd/system/postgresql.service; enabled; vendor preset: enabled)
 Active: active (exited) since Sun 2018-12-02 08:49:29 UTC; 4h 30min ago
 Process: 1295 ExecStart=/bin/true (code=exited, status=0/SUCCESS)
 Main PID: 1295 (code=exited, status=0/SUCCESS)

Dec 02 08:49:29 ubuntu1804 systemd[1]: Starting PostgreSQL RDBMS...
Dec 02 08:49:29 ubuntu1804 systemd[1]: Started PostgreSQL RDBMS.

Next, switch to the postgres user with the following command:

su - postgres

Next, create a sonar user with the following command:

createuser sonar

Next, switch to the PostgreSQL shell with the following command:

psql

Next, set password for sonar user and create a sonar database with the following command:

ALTER USER sonar WITH ENCRYPTED password 'password';
CREATE DATABASE sonar OWNER sonar;

Next, exti from the PostgreSQL shell:

\q

Install and Configure SonarQube

First, create a user for SonarQube with the following command:

sudo adduser sonar

Next, download the latest version of SonarQube with the following command:

wget https://binaries.sonarsource.com/Distribution/sonarqube/sonarqube-6.7.6.zip

Once the download is completed, unzip the downloaded file with the following command:

unzip sonarqube-6.7.6.zip

Next, copy the extracted directory to the /opt with the following command:

sudo cp -r sonarqube-6.7.6 /opt/sonarqube

Next, give ownership to the sonar user with the following command:

sudo chown -R sonar:sonar /opt/sonarqube

Next, you will need to configure SonarQube to run as a sonar user. You can do this with the following command:

sudo nano /opt/sonarqube/bin/linux-x86-64/sonar.sh

Make the following changes:

RUN_AS_USER=sonar

Save and close the file. Then, open SonarQube default configuration file and modify the database credentials with the one we created earlier:

sudo nano /opt/sonarqube/conf/sonar.properties

Make the following changes:

sonar.jdbc.username=sonar
sonar.jdbc.password=password
sonar.jdbc.url=jdbc:postgresql://localhost/sonar
sonar.web.host=127.0.0.1
sonar.search.javaOpts=-Xms512m -Xmx512m

Save and close the file, when you are finished.

Create Systemd Service file for SonarQube

Next, you will need to create a systemd service file to manage SonarQube service. You can do this with the following command:

sudo nano /etc/systemd/system/sonar.service

Add the following lines:

[Unit]
Description=SonarQube service
After=syslog.target network.target

[Service]
Type=forking

ExecStart=/opt/sonarqube/bin/linux-x86-64/sonar.sh start
ExecStop=/opt/sonarqube/bin/linux-x86-64/sonar.sh stop

User=sonar
Group=sonar
Restart=always

[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target

Save and close the file, when you are finished. Then, start SonarQube service and enable it to start on boot time with the following command:

sudo systemctl start sonar
sudo systemctl enable sonar

You can check the status of SonarQube service with the following command:

sudo systemctl status sonar

Output:

? sonar.service - SonarQube service
 Loaded: loaded (/etc/systemd/system/sonar.service; disabled; vendor preset: enabled)
 Active: active (running) since Sun 2018-12-02 13:55:34 UTC; 2min 52s ago
 Process: 2339 ExecStart=/opt/sonarqube/bin/linux-x86-64/sonar.sh start (code=exited, status=0/SUCCESS)
 Main PID: 2396 (wrapper)
 Tasks: 133 (limit: 2323)
 CGroup: /system.slice/sonar.service
 ??2396 /opt/sonarqube/bin/linux-x86-64/./wrapper /opt/sonarqube/bin/linux-x86-64/../../conf/wrapper.conf wrapper.syslog.ident=SonarQ
 ??2399 java -Dsonar.wrapped=true -Djava.awt.headless=true -Xms8m -Xmx32m -Djava.library.path=./lib -classpath ../../lib/jsw/wrapper-
 ??2445 /usr/lib/jvm/java-8-oracle/jre/bin/java -XX:+UseConcMarkSweepGC -XX:CMSInitiatingOccupancyFraction=75 -XX:+UseCMSInitiatingOc
 ??2545 /usr/lib/jvm/java-8-oracle/jre/bin/java -Djava.awt.headless=true -Dfile.encoding=UTF-8 -Djava.io.tmpdir=/opt/sonarqube/temp -
 ??2622 /usr/lib/jvm/java-8-oracle/jre/bin/java -Djava.awt.headless=true -Dfile.encoding=UTF-8 -Djava.io.tmpdir=/opt/sonarqube/temp -

Dec 02 13:55:33 ubuntu1804 systemd[1]: Starting SonarQube service...
Dec 02 13:55:33 ubuntu1804 sonar.sh[2339]: Starting SonarQube...
Dec 02 13:55:34 ubuntu1804 sonar.sh[2339]: Started SonarQube.
Dec 02 13:55:34 ubuntu1804 systemd[1]: Started SonarQube service.

Configure Apache for SonarQube

By default, SonarQube listens on port 9000. So, you will need to install and configure Apache as the reverse proxy to access the SonarQube using port 80.

To do so, install Apache with the following command:

sudo apt-get install apache2 -y

Next, enable mod_proxy module with the following command:

sudo a2enmod proxy
sudo a2enmod proxy_http

Next, create an Apache virtual host file for SonarQube with the following command:

sudo nano /etc/apache2/sites-available/sonar.conf

Add the following lines:

<VirtualHost *:80>
 ServerName example.com
 ServerAdmin [email protected]
 ProxyPreserveHost On
 ProxyPass / http://127.0.0.1:9000/
 ProxyPassReverse / http://127.0.0.1:9000/
 TransferLog /var/log/apache2/sonarm_access.log
 ErrorLog /var/log/apache2/sonar_error.log
</VirtualHost>

Replace example.com with your own domain name. Save and close the file. Then, enable SonarQube virtual host file with the following command:

sudo a2ensite sonar

Finally, restart Apache and SonarQube service to apply all the changes with the following command:

sudo systemctl restart apache2
sudo systemctl restart sonar

By default, SonarQube stores their logs on /opt/sonarqube/logs directory. You can check SonarQube log with the following command:

sudo tail -f /opt/sonarqube/logs/sonar.log

Output:

Launching a JVM...
Wrapper (Version 3.2.3) http://wrapper.tanukisoftware.org
 Copyright 1999-2006 Tanuki Software, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

2018.12.02 13:55:43 INFO app[][o.s.a.AppFileSystem] Cleaning or creating temp directory /opt/sonarqube/temp
2018.12.02 13:55:44 INFO app[][o.s.a.es.EsSettings] Elasticsearch listening on /127.0.0.1:9001
2018.12.02 13:55:45 INFO app[][o.s.a.p.ProcessLauncherImpl] Launch process[[key='es', ipcIndex=1, logFilenamePrefix=es]] from [/opt/sonarqube/elasticsearch]: /opt/sonarqube/elasticsearch/bin/elasticsearch -Epath.conf=/opt/sonarqube/temp/conf/es
2018.12.02 13:55:45 INFO app[][o.s.a.SchedulerImpl] Waiting for Elasticsearch to be up and running
2018.12.02 13:55:48 INFO app[][o.e.p.PluginsService] no modules loaded
2018.12.02 13:55:48 INFO app[][o.e.p.PluginsService] loaded plugin [org.elasticsearch.transport.Netty4Plugin]
2018.12.02 13:56:34 INFO app[][o.s.a.SchedulerImpl] Process[es] is up
2018.12.02 13:56:34 INFO app[][o.s.a.p.ProcessLauncherImpl] Launch process[[key='web', ipcIndex=2, logFilenamePrefix=web]] from [/opt/sonarqube]: /usr/lib/jvm/java-8-oracle/jre/bin/java -Djava.awt.headless=true -Dfile.encoding=UTF-8 -Djava.io.tmpdir=/opt/sonarqube/temp -Xmx512m -Xms128m -XX:+HeapDumpOnOutOfMemoryError -cp ./lib/common/*:./lib/server/*:/opt/sonarqube/lib/jdbc/postgresql/postgresql-42.2.1.jar org.sonar.server.app.WebServer /opt/sonarqube/temp/sq-process420500314195865484properties

You can also check SonarQube web log using the following command:

sudo tail -f /opt/sonarqube/logs/web.log

Output:

2018.12.02 13:57:03 INFO web[][o.s.s.p.ServerPluginRepository] Deploy plugin SonarJava / 4.15.0.12310 / 572454b93016ec73a53fe0e07b2ffdc356d21ba9
2018.12.02 13:57:03 INFO web[][o.s.s.p.ServerPluginRepository] Deploy plugin SonarPHP / 2.11.0.2485 / 741861a29e5f9a26c6c99c06268facb6c4f4a882
2018.12.02 13:57:03 INFO web[][o.s.s.p.ServerPluginRepository] Deploy plugin SonarPython / 1.8.0.1496 / 3fe3bc4d0273a5721ea2fb368dc45b1bb82fede3
2018.12.02 13:57:03 INFO web[][o.s.s.p.ServerPluginRepository] Deploy plugin SonarQube :: Plugins :: SCM :: Git / 1.3.0.869 / 4da53e3f9e55f4f2e5796625cb0c5768ed152079
2018.12.02 13:57:03 INFO web[][o.s.s.p.ServerPluginRepository] Deploy plugin SonarQube :: Plugins :: SCM :: SVN / 1.6.0.860 / 2111fdbd1dddda4ad6d4ed6486fd0b18c1010d3b
2018.12.02 13:57:03 INFO web[][o.s.s.p.ServerPluginRepository] Deploy plugin SonarTS / 1.1.0.1079 / 042c9e65239a47d92d305f9767f730b3cc1e5ed3
2018.12.02 13:57:03 INFO web[][o.s.s.p.ServerPluginRepository] Deploy plugin SonarXML / 1.4.3.1027 / 39588245cecf538bb27be4e496ff303b0143d20b
2018.12.02 13:57:07 INFO web[][o.s.s.p.d.m.c.PostgresCharsetHandler] Verify that database charset supports UTF8
2018.12.02 13:57:09 INFO web[][o.s.s.p.w.MasterServletFilter] Initializing servlet filter [email protected] [pattern=UrlPattern{inclusions=[/api/system/migrate_db/*, ...], exclusions=[/api/properties*, ...]}]
2018.12.02 13:57:09 INFO web[][o.s.s.a.EmbeddedTomcat] HTTP connector enabled on port 9000
2018.12.02 13:57:16 INFO web[][o.s.s.p.UpdateCenterClient] Update center: https://update.sonarsource.org/update-center.properties (no proxy)

Access SonarQube

SonarQube is now installed and configured. It’s time to access it through web browser.

Open your web browser and type the URL http://example.com. You will be redirected to the following page:

SonarQube

Here, click on the Log In button. You should see the following page:

Log In

Provide the default administrator account username and password as admin / admin and click on the Log In button. You should see the SonarQube default dashboard in the following page:

SonarCube Dashboard

Congratulations! you have successfully installed SonarQube on Ubuntu 18.04 server. You can now easily perform automatic reviews and check the health of an application using SonarQube.

نوشته های مشابه