Closed github-learning-lab[bot] closed 3 years ago
🎉 You've created this issue comment using GitHub Script!!!
@ClaudeVernier it looks like you workflow has completed! Let's take a look at the results!
We should be pretty familiar with the first portion of the workflow, it's the same as the first time it ran, and it just creates a comment whenever a new issue has been created.
The second portion may exactly be clear to you, but this issue was added to a project board that is present in this repository. Checkout the projects tab if you want to see that this issue has been added!
One benefit of using actions is the ability to separate jobs
into smaller units of work called steps
. If we think about what our workflow is doing we can see that it makes more sense to have these two tasks take place across two steps.
As an added advantage, once we break the current workflow into multiple steps we can apply logic through expressions to them. This will let us create rules around when steps are allowed to run. Ultimately this allows us to optimize our workflow run!
Since GitHub Script is simply an action, breaking each unique task into a new step works just fine! We will do this in our next activity!
We will make the following changes to the current workflow file:
if
a step should executeEdit the current workflow .github/workflows/my-workflow.yml
to have the following contents:
name: Learning GitHub Script
on:
issues:
types: [opened]
jobs:
comment:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- name: Comment on new issue
uses: actions/github-script@0.8.0
with:
github-token: ${{secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN}}
script: |
github.issues.createComment({
issue_number: context.issue.number,
owner: context.repo.owner,
repo: context.repo.repo,
body: "🎉 You've created this issue comment using GitHub Script!!!"
})
- name: Add issue to project board
if: contains(github.event.issue.labels.*.name, 'bug')
uses: actions/github-script@0.8.0
with:
github-token: ${{secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN}}
script: |
github.projects.createCard({
column_id: 13062833,
content_id: context.payload.issue.id,
content_type: "Issue"
});
Commit the workflow to a new branch.
Create a pull request, I suggest the title Create better comments.
Supply the pull request body content and click Create pull request.
I am waiting for you to create a new pull request before moving on.
I'll respond in the pull request you create
I have created a new pull request where we will continue this lesson. Click the link to meet me over there.
Great job @ClaudeVernier
Now that your updates have been merged and we've triggered the workflow we should see our workflow begin helping us automate the triage of new issues.
Workflow not running? Click here for some troubleshooting.
Try the following troubleshooting steps: 1. Click on the [Actions tab](https://github.com/ClaudeVernier/write-github-script/actions) to see the status of your workflow run. See [Managing a workflow run](https://help.github.com/en/actions/configuring-and-managing-workflows/managing-a-workflow-run) on GitHub Help for more information. 1. Edit your [workflow file]( https://github.com/ClaudeVernier/write-github-script/edit/main/.github/workflows/my-workflow.yml) and look for errors in the linter built into the browser. 1. Look for the [workflow trigger](https://help.github.com/en/actions/reference/events-that-trigger-workflows) and ensure you are performing an action that triggers that workflow. If you need to make changes to your code, remove the [main branch protection](https://github.com/ClaudeVernier/write-github-script/settings/branches) and merge your changes into the `main` branch.I'll respond once your workflow has completed!