Note: GitHub Actions was available for GitHub Enterprise Server 2.22 as a limited beta. The beta has ended. GitHub Actions is now generally available in GitHub Enterprise Server 3.0 or later. For more information, see the GitHub Enterprise Server 3.0 release notes.
- For more information about upgrading to GitHub Enterprise Server 3.0 or later, see "Upgrading GitHub Enterprise Server."
- For more information about configuring GitHub Actions after you upgrade, see the documentation for GitHub Enterprise Server 3.0.
Note: GitHub-hosted runners are not currently supported on GitHub Enterprise Server. You can see more information about planned future support on the GitHub public roadmap.
Overview
GitHub Actions allow you to customize your workflows to meet the unique needs of your application and team. In this guide, we'll discuss some of the essential customization techniques such as using variables, running scripts, and sharing data and artifacts between jobs.
Using variables in your workflows
GitHub Actions include default environment variables for each workflow run. If you need to use custom environment variables, you can set these in your YAML workflow file. This example demonstrates how to create custom variables named POSTGRES_HOST
and POSTGRES_PORT
. These variables are then available to the node client.js
script.
jobs:
example-job:
steps:
- name: Connect to PostgreSQL
run: node client.js
env:
POSTGRES_HOST: postgres
POSTGRES_PORT: 5432
For more information, see "Using environment variables."
Adding scripts to your workflow
You can use actions to run scripts and shell commands, which are then executed on the assigned runner. This example demonstrates how an action can use the run
keyword to execute npm install -g bats
on the runner.
jobs:
example-job:
steps:
- run: npm install -g bats
For example, to run a script as an action, you can store the script in your repository and supply the path and shell type.
jobs:
example-job:
steps:
- name: Run build script
run: ./.github/scripts/build.sh
shell: bash
For more information, see "Workflow syntax for GitHub Actions."
Sharing data between jobs
If your job generates files that you want to share with another job in the same workflow, or if you want to save the files for later reference, you can store them in GitHub as artifacts. Artifacts are the files created when you build and test your code. For example, artifacts might include binary or package files, test results, screenshots, or log files. Artifacts are associated with the workflow run where they were created and can be used by another job.
For example, you can create a file and then upload it as an artifact.
jobs:
example-job:
name: Save output
steps:
- shell: bash
run: |
expr 1 + 1 > output.log
- name: Upload output file
uses: actions/upload-artifact@v2
with:
name: output-log-file
path: output.log
To download an artifact from a separate workflow run, you can use the actions/download-artifact
action. For example, you can download the artifact named output-log-file
.
jobs:
example-job:
steps:
- name: Download a single artifact
uses: actions/download-artifact@v2
with:
name: output-log-file
To download an artifact from the same workflow run, your download job should specify needs: upload-job-name
so it doesn't start until the upload job finishes.
For more information about artifacts, see "Persisting workflow data using artifacts."
Next steps
To continue learning about GitHub Actions, see "Managing complex workflows."