Dang. That would be much easier if their code was open source. At this point I'll just have to stick with my Spring TS work around. Are there open source security code scanners? Most of those fools want you to pay for their junk. With this particular IDE plugin scanner you have to select code or a file less than a Meg to scan.
A better solution would be to have inline scanning that would alert you to issues as your completing source code, IMO. Regards, Steven On Wed, Mar 17, 2021 at 4:19 PM Geertjan Wielenga <[email protected]> wrote: > It will need to be recreated as a NetBeans plugin from scratch, probably > the business logic could be reused, the UI, if any, would need to be > rewritten in Swing. > > You rock too. :-) > > Thanks, > > Gj > > On Wed, Mar 17, 2021 at 8:58 PM Steven Ingram <[email protected] > > > wrote: > > > Hey Y'all. I've been watching this list for a long time and I'm hoping > to > > come back and actually get some work done. My day time gig has been very > > demanding lately. I have a question for you though. > > > > My employer has a contract with a security code scanning company and that > > company has released a plugin version of their scanner for all the best > > IDEs (NOT). Of course Apache Netbeans is not in their support list and I > > loathe Eclipse and I've never wanted to pay for Jetbrains plus I've been > > using Netbeans for 16 years. > > > > My employer has noticed that I've not used the plugin (which they pay a > > license to use) and I've bubbled straight to the top with not using my > > license :) Geez. Anyhow I have the eclipse plugin on hand it's a jar > > file. How difficult would it be to wire in a plugin made for Eclipse > into > > Netbeans? I understand this would be a costume build and I'm not afraid > > of that. > > > > Any thoughts or opinions? > > At this point I've added the plugin to my Spring TS and used it there to > > appease the licensing gods that be. > > > > You all rock!!! > > > > > > Steven Rex Ingram > > 919-376-7363 > > >
