![]() The OpenAPI (Swagger) Editor for IntelliJ IDEA makes creating and navigating OpenAPI definitions quicker and easier, and integrates Security Audit with IntelliJ. In the code, wavy lines in matching color mark the affected element and hovering on it shows all issues in that spot. The color blocks in the minimap show where in your API definition the issues occur, so you can easily hop to check the spot in your code. You can click on the icons to open the Problems view that shows the titles of critical, high, and medium issues. The status bar at the bottom left shows a quick overview on the severity levels of the found issues: The scoring, issue IDs, and the descriptions and remediations for all found issues are shown on the right. However, navigating a report is bit different from the platform UI. Like in 42Crunch Platform, running Security Audit from VS Code gives an audit score for the API definition and produces a report on the found issues. You need a token to authenticate to Security Audit, so on the first time you must provide your email address so that we can send you the token. With the OpenAPI extension, you can run Security Audit straight from the VS Code window, just click the 42C button at the top edge. ![]() ![]() ![]() The OpenAPI (Swagger) Editor for VS Code makes creating and navigating OpenAPI definitions quicker and easier, and integrates Security Audit with VS Code. ![]()
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