Building a Block of a Github Actions
Building a Block of a Github Actions#
As described previously, workflow files use YAML syntax, which has either a .yml
or .yaml
file extension.
If you’re new to YAML and want to learn more, see our section about YMAL.
This workflow files must be stored in the .github/workflows
directory of your repository.
Each workflow is defined in a separate YAML. We will introduce the building block of a workflow using Hello World Example:
name:
Hello World package
on:
push:
branches: [ main ]
Jobs:
build:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v3
1. name
This is the name of the workflow and it is optional. GitHub will use this name to be displayed on the repository’s actions page.
name:
Hello World package
2. on
The on
field tells GHA when to run. For example, we can run the workflow anytime there’s a push
or a pull
on the main
branch.
on:
push:
branches: [ main ]
pull_request:
branches: [ main ]
There are many events which can be used to trigger a workflow. You can explore them here.
3. jobs and steps
This block defines the core component of an Action workflow. Workflows are made of jobs
.
Every job also needs a specific host machine on which to run, the runs-on:
field is how we specify it.
The template workflow is running the build
job in the latest version of Ubuntu, a Linux-based operating system.
jobs:
build:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
We can also separate the build
and test
functions of our workflow into more than one job that will run when our workflow is triggered. Jobs are made of steps
.
These allow you define what to run in each job.
There are three ways to define steps.
With
uses
With
run
With
name
jobs:
build:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v3
test:
steps:
- name: npm install
run: |
npm install
npm test
The most basic action is actions/checkout@v3
.
This uses a GitHub provided action called checkout
to allow the workflow to access the contents of the repository.
All the steps of a job run sequentially on the runner associated with the job.
By default, if a step fails, the subsequent steps of the job are skipped. Each run keyword represents a new process and shell in the runner environment.
When you provide multi-line commands, each line runs in the same shell.
Providing a comprehensive guide of all the available options is beyond the scope of this overview, and instead, we would urge you to study official reference documentation and/or the CI configuration open-source projects references in the previous section.