Open github-learning-lab[bot] opened 4 years ago
There are two components to using GitHub Actions that we'll cover:
A workflow can contain many actions. Each action has its own purpose. We'll put the files relating to the action in their own directories.
Actions come in two types: container actions and JavaScript 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.
Dockerfile
Our action will use a Docker container so it will require a Dockerfile
. Let's add it now. We won't discuss what each line means in detail, but the important thing to know is that the action will be executed in an environment defined by this file.
Dockerfile
and open a pull requestCreate a file titled action-a/Dockerfile
by using this quick link or manually:
first-action
.action-a
. Note: If you're working on GitHub.com, you can create a directory and a file at the same time by naming the file action-a/Dockerfile
.action-a
directory, create a file titled Dockerfile
.Fill the Dockerfile
with the content below:
FROM debian:9.5-slim
ADD entrypoint.sh /entrypoint.sh
RUN chmod +x /entrypoint.sh
ENTRYPOINT ["/entrypoint.sh"]
Commit your file
Open a pull request with your new branch against master
Welcome
This course helps you create a simple GitHub Action and use that action in a workflow.
What are GitHub Actions?
GitHub Actions are a flexible way to automate nearly every aspect of your team's software workflow. Here are just a few of the ways teams are using GitHub Actions:
The sky is truly the limit with GitHub Actions.
The best part, these workflows are stored as code in your repository and easily shared and reused across teams.
To learn even more, check out the GitHub Actions feature page, or the GitHub Actions documentation.
Before you begin
In this course you will work with issues and pull requests, as well as edit files. If these things are not familiar to you, we recommend you take the Introduction to GitHub course, first!