Use Self-Hosted CodeRabbit With Azure DevOps
The self-hosted option is only available for CodeRabbit Enterprise customers with 500 user seats or more. Please contact CodeRabbit Sales to learn more about the CodeRabbit Enterprise plan.
Create an Azure DevOps User
- Username: Set the username to "CodeRabbit" for easier identification (optional).
- Profile Image: Use the CodeRabbitAI logo for the user image (optional).
Add User to Projects
Add the CodeRabbit user to each project where you want CodeRabbit to post reviews, with rights to post reviews & open PRs.
Create a Personal Access Token for CodeRabbit user
Generate a personal access token for the CodeRabbit user to be added in the .env
file as AZURE_DEVOPS_BOT_TOKEN
.
Necessary Scopes:
Code
- FullWork Items
- Read, write, and manage
Consult official CodeRabbitAI documentation for a detailed guide on creating personal access tokens.
Add the necessary webhooks to each project
-
Navigate to project's Service Hooks Page: Go to the service hooks configuration page in the desired Azure DevOps project.
-
Add the following webhooks:
- Pull request created
- Pull request updated
- Pull request commented on
-
Add Webhook URL: Enter the URL pointing to the CodeRabbit service, followed by
/azure_webhooks
(e.g.,http://127.0.0.1:8080/azure_webhooks
) for each webhook.
Prepare an .env
file
Create an .env
file with the following content:
# if using OpenAI
LLM_PROVIDER=openai
LLM_TIMEOUT=360000
OPENAI_API_KEYS=<openai-key>
OPENAI_BASE_URL=[<openai-base-url>]
OPENAI_ORG_ID=[<openai-org-id>]
OPENAI_PROJECT_ID=[<openai-project-id>]
# if using Azure OpenAI
LLM_PROVIDER=azure-openai
LLM_TIMEOUT=360000
AZURE_OPENAI_ENDPOINT=<azure-openai-endpoint>
AZURE_OPENAI_API_KEY=<key>
## it is recommended to use gpt-4o-mini, o3-mini, and o1 deployments.
AZURE_GPT4OMINI_DEPLOYMENT_NAME=<gpt-4o-mini-deployment-name>
AZURE_O3MINI_DEPLOYMENT_NAME=<o3-mini-deployment-name>
AZURE_O1_DEPLOYMENT_NAME=<o1-deployment-name>
# optionally, you can swap o3-mini with o1-mini
AZURE_O1MINI_DEPLOYMENT_NAME=[<o1-mini-deployment-name>]
# OAuth2 Configuration (optional)
# This will use client credentials grant flow to get an access token, and use that token in headers while making requests to AZURE_OPENAI_ENDPOINT.
OAUTH2_ENDPOINT=[<endpoint>]
OAUTH2_CLIENT_ID=[<client-id>]
OAUTH2_CLIENT_SECRET=[<client-secret>]
# if using AWS Bedrock
LLM_PROVIDER=bedrock-anthropic
LLM_TIMEOUT=360000
AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID=<aws-access-key>
AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY=<aws-secret-access-key>
AWS_REGION=<aws-region>
TEMP_PATH=/cache
SELF_HOSTED=azure-devops
AZURE_DEVOPS_BOT_TOKEN=<personal-access-token>
AZURE_DEVOPS_BOT_USERNAME=<bot-user-username>
CODERABBIT_LICENSE_KEY=<license-key>
CODERABBIT_API_KEY=<coderabbitai-api-key>
ENABLE_LEARNINGS=[true]
ENABLE_METRICS=[true]
JIRA_HOST=[<jira-host-url>]
JIRA_PAT=[<jira-personal-access-token>]
LINEAR_PAT=[<linear-personal-access-token>]
- If you are using Azure OpenAI, verify that the model deployment names are in the .env file.
- Values marked with [] are not optional to provide.
- You can generate
CODERABBIT_API_KEY
from CodeRabbit UI -> Organizations Settings -> API Keys.
Pull the CodeRabbit Docker image
Authenticate and pull the Docker image using the provided credentials file:
cat coderabbit.json | docker login -u _json_key --password-stdin us-docker.pkg.dev
docker pull <docker-registry>/coderabbit-agent:latest
Verify the image is up
You can query /health
endpoint to verify that the coderabbit-agent
service is up and running.
curl 127.0.0.1:8080/health
Host the image
You can host the image on a server, serverless function, or container environment and expose port 8080
. Run the Docker image with the equivalent command on your chosen platform, ensuring you replace the .env
file path with the path to your actual .env
file:
docker run --env-file .env --publish 127.0.0.1:8080:8080 <docker-registry>/coderabbit-agent:latest