3º. 2º cuatrimestre. Itinerario de Computación. Grado en Ingeniería Informática. ULL
Github Actions enables you to create custom software development lifecycle workflows directly in your Github repository. These workflows are made out of different tasks so-called actions that can be run automatically on certain events.
This enables you to include Continues Integration (CI) and continuous deployment (CD) capabilities and many other features directly in your repository.
Here is a brief glossary of terms (for more see Core concepts for GitHub Actions):
A Workflow is an automated process that is made up of one or multiple jobs and can be triggered by an event. Workflows are defined using a YAML file in the .github/workflows
directory.
Workflows can be created inside the .github/workflows
directory by adding a .yml
workflow file. Here in the terminal we do:
$ mkdir -p .github/workflows
$ touch .github/workflows/nodejs.yml
and use our favourite editor.
Ejemplo:
name: Node.js Package
on:
release:
types: [created]
jobs:
build:
...
publish-npm:
...
publish-gpr:
needs: build
...
We can also use the GitHub Interface.
The Github Actions Editor is quite clever: Auto-complete can be triggered with Ctrl+Space almost anywhere.
Auto-complete works even inside expressions
A job is made up of multiple steps and runs in an instance of the virtual environment. Jobs can
Example:
name: Node.js Package
on:
release:
types: [created]
jobs:
build:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v2
- uses: actions/setup-node@v1
with:
node-version: 12
- run: npm ci
- run: npm test
publish-npm:
needs: build
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
...
publish-gpr:
needs: build
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
...
The needs
attribute inside the publish-npm
job tell us that this job
can not start until the build
step has finished
A step is a set of tasks that can be executed by a job. Steps can run commands or actions.
Example:
name: Node.js Package
on:
release:
types: [created]
jobs:
build:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v2 # An action
- uses: actions/setup-node@v1
with:
node-version: 12
- run: npm ci # A command
- run: npm test
Actions are the smallest portable building block of a workflow and can be combined as steps to create a job.
There are two types of actions:
Docker container actions allow the environment to be packaged with the GitHub Actions code and can only execute in the GitHub-Hosted Linux environment.
JavaScript actions decouple the GitHub Actions code from the environment allowing faster execution but accepting greater dependency management responsibility.
Actions require a metadata file to define the
for your action.
The metadata filename must be either action.yml
or action.yaml
.
Type | Operating system |
---|---|
Docker container | Linux |
JavaScript | Linux, MacOS, Windows |
Here you can find instructions if you want to develop an action for other people to use
Here is an example of an action: actions/create-release
Events are specific activities that trigger a workflow run. For example, a workflow is triggered when somebody pushes to the repository or when a pull request is created. Events can also be configured to listen to external events using Webhooks.
release
eventA runner is a machine with the Github Actions runner
application installed. Then runner
waits for available jobs it can then execute. After picking up a job they run the job’s actions and report the progress and results back to Github. Runners can be hosted on Github or self-hosted on your own machines/servers.
Github Actions files are written using YAML syntax and have either a .yml
or .yaml
file extension. Here are the most important concepts for the workflow file.
The name of your workflow that is displayed on the Github actions page. If you omit this field, it is set to the file name.
name: CI for scapegoat module
The on
keyword defines the Github events that trigger the workflow. You can provide a single event, array or events or a configuration map that schedules a workflow.
on: push
or
on: [pull_request, issues]
A workflow run is made up of one or more jobs. Jobs define the functionality that will be run in the workflow and run in parallel by default.
jobs:
ci-scapegoat:
# Define the OS our workflow should run on
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
strategy:
# To test across multiple language versions
matrix:
node-version: [12.x]
steps: # Clone the repo. See https://github.com/actions/checkout
- uses: actions/checkout@v2
# Example of using an environment variable
- name: Use Node.js ${{ matrix.node-version }} # Will be: "Use Node.js 12.x"
uses: actions/setup-node@v1 # Install node. See https://github.com/actions/setup-node
with:
node-version: ${{ matrix.node-version }}
# Install a project with a clean slate
- run: npm ci
- run: npm test
# Environment variables
env:
CI: true
Env defines a map of environment variables that are available to all jobs and steps in the workflow. You can also set environment variables that are only available to a job or step.
env:
CI: true
A map of the input
parameters defined by the action.
Each input
parameter is a key/value
pair.
Input parameters are set as environment variables.
The variable is prefixed with INPUT_
and converted to upper case.
Example
Defines the three input parameters (first_name
, middle_name
, and last_name
)
defined by the hello_world
action.
These input variables will be accessible to the hello-world
action as INPUT_FIRST_NAME
, INPUT_MIDDLE_NAME
, and INPUT_LAST_NAME
environment variables.
jobs:
my_first_job:
steps:
- name: My first step
uses: actions/hello_world@master
with:
first_name: Mona
middle_name: The
last_name: Octocat
You can use expressions to programmatically set variables in workflow files and access contexts.
${{ <expression> }}
You can combine literals, context references, and functions using operators.
An expression can be any combination of
env:
myNull: ${ { null }}
myBoolean: ${ { false }}
myIntegerNumber: ${ { 711 }}
myFloatNumber: ${ { -9.2 }}
myHexNumber: ${ { 0xff }}
myExponentialNumber: ${ { -2.99-e2 }}
myString: ${ { 'Mona the Octocat' }}
myEscapedString: ${ { 'It''s open source!' }}
Operator | Description |
---|---|
( ) |
Logical grouping |
[ ] |
Index |
. |
Property dereference |
! |
Not |
< |
Less than |
<= |
Less than or equal |
> |
Greater than |
>= |
Greater than or equal |
== |
Equal |
!= |
Not equal |
&& |
And |
|| |
Or |
GitHub offers a set of built-in functions
Example:
format('Hello {0} {1} {2}', 'Mona', 'the', 'Octocat')
Returns 'Hello Mona the Octocat'
contains('Hello world', 'llo')
returns true
Expressions are commonly used with the conditional if keyword in a workflow file to determine whether a step should run.
When you use expressions in an if
conditional,
you do not need to use the expression syntax (${ { }}
)
because GitHub automatically evaluates the if
conditional as an expression.
For more information about if conditionals, see “Workflow syntax for GitHub Actions.”
Example expression in an if
conditional
steps:
- name: Git checkout
if: github.event.check_suite.app.name == 'Netlify' && github.event.check_suite.conclusion == 'success'
uses: actions/checkout@master
- name: Install Node
if: success()
uses: actions/setup-node@v1
with:
node-version: 10.x
- name: Install npm dependencies
if: success()
run: npm install
- name: Run Audit
if: success()
uses: ./.github/actions/run-audit
success()
returns true
when none of the previous steps have failed or been canceled.
See Job status check functions
You can use the *
syntax to apply a filter and select matching items in a collection:
[
{ "name": "apple", "quantity": 1 },
{ "name": "orange", "quantity": 2 },
{ "name": "pear", "quantity": 1 }
]
The filter fruits.*.name
returns the array [ "apple", "orange", "pear" ]
Here is another example:
contains(github.event.issue.labels.*.name, 'bug')
will be true
if the attribute name
of one of the labels of the issue that
has triggered the event is 'bug'
Contexts are a way to access information about workflow runs, runner environments, jobs, and steps. Contexts use the expression syntax. See Context and expression syntax for GitHub Actions at the GitHub Actions Reference.
${{ <context> }}
The matrix context enables access to the matrix parameters you configured for the current job.
For example, if you configure a matrix build with the os and node versions, the matrix context object includes the os and node versions of the current job.
The github context contains information about
You can read most of the github context data in environment variables.
for example, github.ref
contains the branch or tag ref that triggered the workflow run
The env context contains environment variables that have been set in a workflow, job, or step.
This context changes for each step in a job. You can access this context from any step in a job.
The steps context contains information about the steps in the current job that have already run.
Here is a more complex example using step information and functions
...
- name: save vsix
uses: actions/upload-artifact@master
with:
name: ${ { format('vscode-hugo-{0}-{1}.vsix', steps.build_package.outputs.version, github.sha) }}
path: ${ { format('vscode-hugo-{0}.vsix', steps.build_package.outputs.version) }}
The runner context contains information about the runner that is executing the current job.
Examples are runner.os
for the Operating System or runner.temp
for the path of the temporary directory for the runner. This directory is guaranteed to be empty at the start of each job, even on self-hosted runners.
The strategy context enables access to the configured strategy parameters and information about the current job.
Here is an example of use of the strategy context.
The secrets context access to secrets set in a repository. See Creating and storing encrypted secrets.
To create a secret:
On GitHub, navigate to the main page of the repository.
Under your repository name, click Settings.
In the left sidebar, click Secrets.
Type a name for your secret in the “Name” input box.
Type the value for your secret.
Click Add secret.
To use a secret:
steps:
- name: Hello world action
with: # Set the secret as an input
super_secret: ${{ secrets.SuperSecret }}
env: # Or as an environment variable
super_secret: ${{ secrets.SuperSecret }}
For example, to write a github action to publish a npm package in the npm registry I surely need to give GitHub a token so that it can work on my name and publish the package. Thus, the procedure will be:
You create a token for npm with read and publish permits:
[~/.../lexer-generator(master)]$ npm token create
npm password:
┌────────────────┬──────────────────────────────────────┐
│ token │ blah-blah-blah-blah-blahblahblah │
├────────────────┼──────────────────────────────────────┤
│ cidr_whitelist │ │
├────────────────┼──────────────────────────────────────┤
│ readonly │ false │
├────────────────┼──────────────────────────────────────┤
│ created │ 2020-03-30T15:39:01.799Z │
│ created │ 2020-03-30T15:39:01.799Z │
└────────────────┴──────────────────────────────────────┘
npm_token
secrets
contextname: Node.js Package
on:
release:
types: [created]
jobs:
build:
...
publish-npm:
needs: build
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v2
- uses: actions/setup-node@v1
with:
node-version: 12
registry-url: https://registry.npmjs.org/
- run: npm ci
- run: npm publish --access public
env:
NODE_AUTH_TOKEN: ${{secrets.npm_token }}
To inspect the information that is accessible in each context, you can use this workflow file example.
[~/.../scapegoat(master)]$ cat .github/workflows/debug.yml
name: Debugging contexts
on: push
jobs:
one:
runs-on: ubuntu-16.04
steps:
- name: Dump GitHub context
env:
GITHUB_CONTEXT: ${ { toJson(github) }}
run: echo "$GITHUB_CONTEXT"
- name: Dump job context
env:
JOB_CONTEXT: ${ { toJson(job) }}
run: echo "$JOB_CONTEXT"
- name: Dump steps context
env:
STEPS_CONTEXT: ${ { toJson(steps) }}
run: echo "$STEPS_CONTEXT"
- name: Dump runner context
env:
RUNNER_CONTEXT: ${ { toJson(runner) }}
run: echo "$RUNNER_CONTEXT"
- name: Dump strategy context
env:
STRATEGY_CONTEXT: ${ { toJson(strategy) }}
run: echo "$STRATEGY_CONTEXT"
- name: Dump matrix context
env:
MATRIX_CONTEXT: ${ { toJson(matrix) }}
run: echo "$MATRIX_CONTEXT"
Here is an example of output
GitHub automatically creates a GITHUB_TOKEN secret to use in your workflow. You can use the GITHUB_TOKEN
to authenticate in a workflow run.
When you enable GitHub Actions, GitHub installs a GitHub App on your repository.
The GITHUB_TOKEN
secret is a GitHub App installation access token.
You can use the installation access token to authenticate on behalf of the GitHub App installed on your repository.
The token’s permissions are limited to the repository that contains your workflow.
For more see Authenticating with the GITHUB_TOKEN
For example, when the repo contains and npm module and
we want to write a github action to publish the npm package in the GitHub Package Registry
it is enough to use the GITHUB_TOKEN
.
Thus, this is enough to do the job:
jobs:
build:
...
publish-npm:
...
publish-gpr:
needs: build
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v2
- uses: actions/setup-node@v1
with:
node-version: 12
registry-url: https://npm.pkg.github.com/
scope: @ULL-ESIT-PL1920
- run: npm ci
- run: npm publish
env:
NODE_AUTH_TOKEN: ${{secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}