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.
About YAML syntax for workflows
Workflow files use YAML syntax, and must have either a .yml
or .yaml
file extension. If you're new to YAML and want to learn more, see "Learn YAML in Y minutes."
You must store workflow files in the .github/workflows
directory of your repository.
name
The name of your workflow. GitHub displays the names of your workflows on your repository's actions page. If you omit name
, GitHub sets it to the workflow file path relative to the root of the repository.
on
Required. The name of the GitHub event that triggers the workflow. You can provide a single event string
, array
of events, array
of event types
, or an event configuration map
that schedules a workflow or restricts the execution of a workflow to specific files, tags, or branch changes. For a list of available events, see "Events that trigger workflows."
Example: Using a single event
# Triggered when code is pushed to any branch in a repository
on: push
Example: Using a list of events
# Triggers the workflow on push or pull request events
on: [push, pull_request]
Example: Using multiple events with activity types or configuration
If you need to specify activity types or configuration for an event, you must configure each event separately. You must append a colon (:
) to all events, including events without configuration.
on:
# Trigger the workflow on push or pull request,
# but only for the main branch
push:
branches:
- main
pull_request:
branches:
- main
# Also trigger on page_build, as well as release created events
page_build:
release:
types: # This configuration does not affect the page_build event above
- created
on.<event_name>.types
Selects the types of activity that will trigger a workflow run. Most GitHub events are triggered by more than one type of activity. For example, the event for the release resource is triggered when a release is published
, unpublished
, created
, edited
, deleted
, or prereleased
. The types
keyword enables you to narrow down activity that causes the workflow to run. When only one activity type triggers a webhook event, the types
keyword is unnecessary.
You can use an array of event types
. For more information about each event and their activity types, see "Events that trigger workflows."
# Trigger the workflow on release activity
on:
release:
# Only use the types keyword to narrow down the activity types that will trigger your workflow.
types: [published, created, edited]
on.<push|pull_request>.<branches|tags>
When using the push
and pull_request
events, you can configure a workflow to run on specific branches or tags. For a pull_request
event, only branches and tags on the base are evaluated. If you define only tags
or only branches
, the workflow won't run for events affecting the undefined Git ref.
The branches
, branches-ignore
, tags
, and tags-ignore
keywords accept glob patterns that use characters like *
, **
, +
, ?
, !
and others to match more than one branch or tag name. If a name contains any of these characters and you want a literal match, you need to escape each of these special characters with \
. For more information about glob patterns, see the "Filter pattern cheat sheet."
Example: Including branches and tags
The patterns defined in branches
and tags
are evaluated against the Git ref's name. For example, defining the pattern mona/octocat
in branches
will match the refs/heads/mona/octocat
Git ref. The pattern releases/**
will match the refs/heads/releases/10
Git ref.
on:
push:
# Sequence of patterns matched against refs/heads
branches:
# Push events on main branch
- main
# Push events to branches matching refs/heads/mona/octocat
- 'mona/octocat'
# Push events to branches matching refs/heads/releases/10
- 'releases/**'
# Sequence of patterns matched against refs/tags
tags:
- v1 # Push events to v1 tag
- v1.* # Push events to v1.0, v1.1, and v1.9 tags
Example: Ignoring branches and tags
Anytime a pattern matches the branches-ignore
or tags-ignore
pattern, the workflow will not run. The patterns defined in branches-ignore
and tags-ignore
are evaluated against the Git ref's name. For example, defining the pattern mona/octocat
in branches
will match the refs/heads/mona/octocat
Git ref. The pattern releases/**-alpha
in branches
will match the refs/releases/beta/3-alpha
Git ref.
on:
push:
# Sequence of patterns matched against refs/heads
branches-ignore:
# Do not push events to branches matching refs/heads/mona/octocat
- 'mona/octocat'
# Do not push events to branches matching refs/heads/releases/beta/3-alpha
- 'releases/**-alpha'
# Sequence of patterns matched against refs/tags
tags-ignore:
- v1.* # Do not push events to tags v1.0, v1.1, and v1.9
Excluding branches and tags
You can use two types of filters to prevent a workflow from running on pushes and pull requests to tags and branches.
branches
orbranches-ignore
- You cannot use both thebranches
andbranches-ignore
filters for the same event in a workflow. Use thebranches
filter when you need to filter branches for positive matches and exclude branches. Use thebranches-ignore
filter when you only need to exclude branch names.tags
ortags-ignore
- You cannot use both thetags
andtags-ignore
filters for the same event in a workflow. Use thetags
filter when you need to filter tags for positive matches and exclude tags. Use thetags-ignore
filter when you only need to exclude tag names.
Example: Using positive and negative patterns
You can exclude tags
and branches
using the !
character. The order that you define patterns matters.
- A matching negative pattern (prefixed with
!
) after a positive match will exclude the Git ref. - A matching positive pattern after a negative match will include the Git ref again.
The following workflow will run on pushes to releases/10
or releases/beta/mona
, but not on releases/10-alpha
or releases/beta/3-alpha
because the negative pattern !releases/**-alpha
follows the positive pattern.
on:
push:
branches:
- 'releases/**'
- '!releases/**-alpha'
on.<push|pull_request>.paths
When using the push
and pull_request
events, you can configure a workflow to run when at least one file does not match paths-ignore
or at least one modified file matches the configured paths
. Path filters are not evaluated for pushes to tags.
The paths-ignore
and paths
keywords accept glob patterns that use the *
and **
wildcard characters to match more than one path name. For more information, see the "Filter pattern cheat sheet."
Example: Ignoring paths
When all the path names match patterns in paths-ignore
, the workflow will not run. GitHub evaluates patterns defined in paths-ignore
against the path name. A workflow with the following path filter will only run on push
events that include at least one file outside the docs
directory at the root of the repository.
on:
push:
paths-ignore:
- 'docs/**'
Example: Including paths
If at least one path matches a pattern in the paths
filter, the workflow runs. To trigger a build anytime you push a JavaScript file, you can use a wildcard pattern.
on:
push:
paths:
- '**.js'
Excluding paths
You can exclude paths using two types of filters. You cannot use both of these filters for the same event in a workflow.
paths-ignore
- Use thepaths-ignore
filter when you only need to exclude path names.paths
- Use thepaths
filter when you need to filter paths for positive matches and exclude paths.
Example: Using positive and negative patterns
You can exclude paths
using the !
character. The order that you define patterns matters:
- A matching negative pattern (prefixed with
!
) after a positive match will exclude the path. - A matching positive pattern after a negative match will include the path again.
This example runs anytime the push
event includes a file in the sub-project
directory or its subdirectories, unless the file is in the sub-project/docs
directory. For example, a push that changed sub-project/index.js
or sub-project/src/index.js
will trigger a workflow run, but a push changing only sub-project/docs/readme.md
will not.
on:
push:
paths:
- 'sub-project/**'
- '!sub-project/docs/**'
Git diff comparisons
Note: If you push more than 1,000 commits, or if GitHub does not generate the diff due to a timeout, the workflow will always run.
The filter determines if a workflow should run by evaluating the changed files and running them against the paths-ignore
or paths
list. If there are no files changed, the workflow will not run.
GitHub generates the list of changed files using two-dot diffs for pushes and three-dot diffs for pull requests:
- Pull requests: Three-dot diffs are a comparison between the most recent version of the topic branch and the commit where the topic branch was last synced with the base branch.
- Pushes to existing branches: A two-dot diff compares the head and base SHAs directly with each other.
- Pushes to new branches: A two-dot diff against the parent of the ancestor of the deepest commit pushed.
Diffs are limited to 300 files. If there are files changed that aren't matched in the first 300 files returned by the filter, the workflow will not run. You may need to create more specific filters so that the workflow will run automatically.
For more information, see "About comparing branches in pull requests."
on.workflow_dispatch.inputs
When using the workflow_dispatch
event, you can optionally specify inputs that are passed to the workflow. Workflow dispatch inputs are specified with the same format as action inputs. For more information about the format see "Metadata syntax for GitHub Actions."
on:
workflow_dispatch:
inputs:
logLevel:
description: 'Log level'
required: true
default: 'warning'
tags:
description: 'Test scenario tags'
required: false
The triggered workflow receives the inputs in the github.event.inputs
context. For more information, see "Contexts."
on.schedule
You can schedule a workflow to run at specific UTC times using POSIX cron syntax. Scheduled workflows run on the latest commit on the default or base branch. The shortest interval you can run scheduled workflows is once every 5 minutes.
This example triggers the workflow every day at 5:30 and 17:30 UTC:
on:
schedule:
# * is a special character in YAML so you have to quote this string
- cron: '30 5,17 * * *'
For more information about cron syntax, see "Events that trigger workflows."
env
A map
of environment variables that are available to the steps of all jobs in the workflow. You can also set environment variables that are only available to the steps of a single job or to a single step. For more information, see jobs.<job_id>.env
and jobs.<job_id>.steps[*].env
.
When more than one environment variable is defined with the same name, GitHub uses the most specific environment variable. For example, an environment variable defined in a step will override job and workflow variables with the same name, while the step executes. A variable defined for a job will override a workflow variable with the same name, while the job executes.
Example
env:
SERVER: production
defaults
A map
of default settings that will apply to all jobs in the workflow. You can also set default settings that are only available to a job. For more information, see jobs.<job_id>.defaults
.
When more than one default setting is defined with the same name, GitHub uses the most specific default setting. For example, a default setting defined in a job will override a default setting that has the same name defined in a workflow.
defaults.run
You can provide default shell
and working-directory
options for all run
steps in a workflow. You can also set default settings for run
that are only available to a job. For more information, see jobs.<job_id>.defaults.run
. You cannot use contexts or expressions in this keyword.
When more than one default setting is defined with the same name, GitHub uses the most specific default setting. For example, a default setting defined in a job will override a default setting that has the same name defined in a workflow.
Example
defaults:
run:
shell: bash
working-directory: scripts
jobs
A workflow run is made up of one or more jobs. Jobs run in parallel by default. To run jobs sequentially, you can define dependencies on other jobs using the jobs.<job_id>.needs
keyword.
Each job runs in a runner environment specified by runs-on
.
You can run an unlimited number of jobs as long as you are within the workflow usage limits. For more information, see "Usage limits and billing" for GitHub-hosted runners and "About self-hosted runners" for self-hosted runner usage limits.
If you need to find the unique identifier of a job running in a workflow run, you can use the GitHub Enterprise Server API. For more information, see "Workflow Jobs."
jobs.<job_id>
Create an identifier for your job by giving it a unique name. The key job_id
is a string and its value is a map of the job's configuration data. You must replace <job_id>
with a string that is unique to the jobs
object. The <job_id>
must start with a letter or _
and contain only alphanumeric characters, -
, or _
.
Example
In this example, two jobs have been created, and their job_id
values are my_first_job
and my_second_job
.
jobs:
my_first_job:
name: My first job
my_second_job:
name: My second job
jobs.<job_id>.name
The name of the job displayed on GitHub.
jobs.<job_id>.needs
Identifies any jobs that must complete successfully before this job will run. It can be a string or array of strings. If a job fails, all jobs that need it are skipped unless the jobs use a conditional expression that causes the job to continue.
Example: Requiring dependent jobs to be successful
jobs:
job1:
job2:
needs: job1
job3:
needs: [job1, job2]
In this example, job1
must complete successfully before job2
begins, and job3
waits for both job1
and job2
to complete.
The jobs in this example run sequentially:
job1
job2
job3
Example: Not requiring dependent jobs to be successful
jobs:
job1:
job2:
needs: job1
job3:
if: ${{ always() }}
needs: [job1, job2]
In this example, job3
uses the always()
conditional expression so that it always runs after job1
and job2
have completed, regardless of whether they were successful. For more information, see "Expressions."
jobs.<job_id>.runs-on
Required. The type of machine to run the job on. The machine can be either a GitHub-hosted runner or a self-hosted runner.
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.
GitHub-hosted runners
If you use a GitHub-hosted runner, each job runs in a fresh instance of a virtual environment specified by runs-on
.
Available GitHub-hosted runner types are:
Virtual environment | YAML workflow label | Notes |
---|---|---|
Windows Server 2022[beta] | windows-2022 |
The windows-latest label currently uses the Windows Server 2019 runner image.
|
Windows Server 2019 | windows-latest or windows-2019 |
|
Windows Server 2016 | windows-2016 |
|
Ubuntu 20.04 | ubuntu-latest or ubuntu-20.04 |
|
Ubuntu 18.04 | ubuntu-18.04 |
|
macOS Big Sur 11 | macos-11 |
The macos-latest label currently uses the macOS 10.15 runner image.
|
macOS Catalina 10.15 | macos-latest or macos-10.15 |
Note: Beta Images are provided "as-is", "with all faults" and "as available" and are excluded from the service level agreement and warranty. Beta Images may not be covered by customer support.
Example
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
For more information, see "Virtual environments for GitHub-hosted runners."
Self-hosted runners
To specify a self-hosted runner for your job, configure runs-on
in your workflow file with self-hosted runner labels.
All self-hosted runners have the self-hosted
label. Using only this label will select any self-hosted runner. To select runners that meet certain criteria, such as operating system or architecture, provide an array of labels that begins with self-hosted
(this must be listed first) and then includes additional labels as needed.
Example
runs-on: [self-hosted, linux]
For more information, see "About self-hosted runners" and "Using self-hosted runners in a workflow."
jobs.<job_id>.outputs
A map
of outputs for a job. Job outputs are available to all downstream jobs that depend on this job. For more information on defining job dependencies, see jobs.<job_id>.needs
.
Job outputs are strings, and job outputs containing expressions are evaluated on the runner at the end of each job. Outputs containing secrets are redacted on the runner and not sent to GitHub Actions.
To use job outputs in a dependent job, you can use the needs
context. For more information, see "Contexts."
Example
jobs:
job1:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
# Map a step output to a job output
outputs:
output1: ${{ steps.step1.outputs.test }}
output2: ${{ steps.step2.outputs.test }}
steps:
- id: step1
run: echo "::set-output name=test::hello"
- id: step2
run: echo "::set-output name=test::world"
job2:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
needs: job1
steps:
- run: echo ${{needs.job1.outputs.output1}} ${{needs.job1.outputs.output2}}
jobs.<job_id>.env
A map
of environment variables that are available to all steps in the job. You can also set environment variables for the entire workflow or an individual step. For more information, see env
and jobs.<job_id>.steps[*].env
.
When more than one environment variable is defined with the same name, GitHub uses the most specific environment variable. For example, an environment variable defined in a step will override job and workflow variables with the same name, while the step executes. A variable defined for a job will override a workflow variable with the same name, while the job executes.
Example
jobs:
job1:
env:
FIRST_NAME: Mona
jobs.<job_id>.defaults
A map
of default settings that will apply to all steps in the job. You can also set default settings for the entire workflow. For more information, see defaults
.
When more than one default setting is defined with the same name, GitHub uses the most specific default setting. For example, a default setting defined in a job will override a default setting that has the same name defined in a workflow.
jobs.<job_id>.defaults.run
Provide default shell
and working-directory
to all run
steps in the job. Context and expression are not allowed in this section.
You can provide default shell
and working-directory
options for all run
steps in a job. You can also set default settings for run
for the entire workflow. For more information, see jobs.defaults.run
. You cannot use contexts or expressions in this keyword.
When more than one default setting is defined with the same name, GitHub uses the most specific default setting. For example, a default setting defined in a job will override a default setting that has the same name defined in a workflow.
Example
jobs:
job1:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
defaults:
run:
shell: bash
working-directory: scripts
jobs.<job_id>.if
You can use the if
conditional to prevent a job from running unless a condition is met. You can use any supported context and expression to create a conditional.
When you use expressions in an if
conditional, you may omit the expression syntax (${{ }}
) because GitHub automatically evaluates the if
conditional as an expression. For more information, see "Expressions."
jobs.<job_id>.steps
A job contains a sequence of tasks called steps
. Steps can run commands, run setup tasks, or run an action in your repository, a public repository, or an action published in a Docker registry. Not all steps run actions, but all actions run as a step. Each step runs in its own process in the runner environment and has access to the workspace and filesystem. Because steps run in their own process, changes to environment variables are not preserved between steps. GitHub provides built-in steps to set up and complete a job.
You can run an unlimited number of steps as long as you are within the workflow usage limits. For more information, see "Usage limits and billing" for GitHub-hosted runners and "About self-hosted runners" for self-hosted runner usage limits.
Example
name: Greeting from Mona
on: push
jobs:
my-job:
name: My Job
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- name: Print a greeting
env:
MY_VAR: Hi there! My name is
FIRST_NAME: Mona
MIDDLE_NAME: The
LAST_NAME: Octocat
run: |
echo $MY_VAR $FIRST_NAME $MIDDLE_NAME $LAST_NAME.
jobs.<job_id>.steps[*].id
A unique identifier for the step. You can use the id
to reference the step in contexts. For more information, see "Contexts."
jobs.<job_id>.steps[*].if
You can use the if
conditional to prevent a step from running unless a condition is met. You can use any supported context and expression to create a conditional.
When you use expressions in an if
conditional, you may omit the expression syntax (${{ }}
) because GitHub automatically evaluates the if
conditional as an expression. For more information, see "Expressions."
Example: Using contexts
This step only runs when the event type is a pull_request
and the event action is unassigned
.
steps:
- name: My first step
if: ${{ github.event_name == 'pull_request' && github.event.action == 'unassigned' }}
run: echo This event is a pull request that had an assignee removed.
Example: Using status check functions
The my backup step
only runs when the previous step of a job fails. For more information, see "Expressions."
steps:
- name: My first step
uses: octo-org/action-name@main
- name: My backup step
if: ${{ failure() }}
uses: actions/heroku@1.0.0
jobs.<job_id>.steps[*].name
A name for your step to display on GitHub.
jobs.<job_id>.steps[*].uses
Selects an action to run as part of a step in your job. An action is a reusable unit of code. You can use an action defined in the same repository as the workflow, a public repository, or in a published Docker container image.
We strongly recommend that you include the version of the action you are using by specifying a Git ref, SHA, or Docker tag number. If you don't specify a version, it could break your workflows or cause unexpected behavior when the action owner publishes an update.
- Using the commit SHA of a released action version is the safest for stability and security.
- Using the specific major action version allows you to receive critical fixes and security patches while still maintaining compatibility. It also assures that your workflow should still work.
- Using the default branch of an action may be convenient, but if someone releases a new major version with a breaking change, your workflow could break.
Some actions require inputs that you must set using the with
keyword. Review the action's README file to determine the inputs required.
Actions are either JavaScript files or Docker containers. If the action you're using is a Docker container you must run the job in a Linux environment. For more details, see runs-on
.
Example: Using versioned actions
steps:
# Reference a specific commit
- uses: actions/checkout@a81bbbf8298c0fa03ea29cdc473d45769f953675
# Reference the major version of a release
- uses: actions/checkout@v2
# Reference a specific version
- uses: actions/checkout@v2.2.0
# Reference a branch
- uses: actions/checkout@main
Example: Using a public action
{owner}/{repo}@{ref}
You can specify a branch, ref, or SHA in a public GitHub repository.
jobs:
my_first_job:
steps:
- name: My first step
# Uses the default branch of a public repository
uses: actions/heroku@main
- name: My second step
# Uses a specific version tag of a public repository
uses: actions/aws@v2.0.1
Example: Using a public action in a subdirectory
{owner}/{repo}/{path}@{ref}
A subdirectory in a public GitHub repository at a specific branch, ref, or SHA.
jobs:
my_first_job:
steps:
- name: My first step
uses: actions/aws/ec2@main
Example: Using an action in the same repository as the workflow
./path/to/dir
The path to the directory that contains the action in your workflow's repository. You must check out your repository before using the action.
jobs:
my_first_job:
steps:
- name: Check out repository
uses: actions/checkout@v2
- name: Use local my-action
uses: ./.github/actions/my-action
Example: Using a Docker Hub action
docker://{image}:{tag}
A Docker image published on Docker Hub.
jobs:
my_first_job:
steps:
- name: My first step
uses: docker://alpine:3.8
Example: Using a Docker public registry action
docker://{host}/{image}:{tag}
A Docker image in a public registry. This example uses the Google Container Registry at gcr.io
.
jobs:
my_first_job:
steps:
- name: My first step
uses: docker://gcr.io/cloud-builders/gradle
Example: Using an action inside a different private repository than the workflow
Your workflow must checkout the private repository and reference the action locally. Generate a personal access token and add the token as an encrypted secret. For more information, see "Creating a personal access token" and "Encrypted secrets."
Replace PERSONAL_ACCESS_TOKEN
in the example with the name of your secret.
jobs:
my_first_job:
steps:
- name: Check out repository
uses: actions/checkout@v2
with:
repository: octocat/my-private-repo
ref: v1.0
token: ${{ secrets.PERSONAL_ACCESS_TOKEN }}
path: ./.github/actions/my-private-repo
- name: Run my action
uses: ./.github/actions/my-private-repo/my-action
jobs.<job_id>.steps[*].run
Runs command-line programs using the operating system's shell. If you do not provide a name
, the step name will default to the text specified in the run
command.
Commands run using non-login shells by default. You can choose a different shell and customize the shell used to run commands. For more information, see "Using a specific shell."
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. For example:
-
A single-line command:
- name: Install Dependencies run: npm install
-
A multi-line command:
- name: Clean install dependencies and build run: | npm ci npm run build
Using the working-directory
keyword, you can specify the working directory of where to run the command.
- name: Clean temp directory
run: rm -rf *
working-directory: ./temp
Using a specific shell
You can override the default shell settings in the runner's operating system using the shell
keyword. You can use built-in shell
keywords, or you can define a custom set of shell options. The shell command that is run internally executes a temporary file that contains the commands specified in the run
keyword.
Supported platform | shell parameter | Description | Command run internally |
---|---|---|---|
All | bash | The default shell on non-Windows platforms with a fallback to sh . When specifying a bash shell on Windows, the bash shell included with Git for Windows is used. | bash --noprofile --norc -eo pipefail {0} |
All | pwsh | The PowerShell Core. GitHub appends the extension .ps1 to your script name. | pwsh -command ". '{0}'" |
All | python | Executes the python command. | python {0} |
Linux / macOS | sh | The fallback behavior for non-Windows platforms if no shell is provided and bash is not found in the path. | sh -e {0} |
Windows | cmd | GitHub appends the extension .cmd to your script name and substitutes for {0} . | %ComSpec% /D /E:ON /V:OFF /S /C "CALL "{0}"" . |
Windows | pwsh | This is the default shell used on Windows. The PowerShell Core. GitHub appends the extension .ps1 to your script name. If your self-hosted Windows runner does not have PowerShell Core installed, then PowerShell Desktop is used instead. | pwsh -command ". '{0}'" . |
Windows | powershell | The PowerShell Desktop. GitHub appends the extension .ps1 to your script name. | powershell -command ". '{0}'" . |
Example: Running a script using bash
steps:
- name: Display the path
run: echo $PATH
shell: bash
Example: Running a script using Windows cmd
steps:
- name: Display the path
run: echo %PATH%
shell: cmd
Example: Running a script using PowerShell Core
steps:
- name: Display the path
run: echo ${env:PATH}
shell: pwsh
Example: Using PowerShell Desktop to run a script
steps:
- name: Display the path
run: echo ${env:PATH}
shell: powershell
Example: Running a python script
steps:
- name: Display the path
run: |
import os
print(os.environ['PATH'])
shell: python
Custom shell
You can set the shell
value to a template string using command […options] {0} [..more_options]
. GitHub interprets the first whitespace-delimited word of the string as the command, and inserts the file name for the temporary script at {0}
.
For example:
steps:
- name: Display the environment variables and their values
run: |
print %ENV
shell: perl {0}
The command used, perl
in this example, must be installed on the runner.
For information about the software included on GitHub-hosted runners, see "Specifications for GitHub-hosted runners."
Exit codes and error action preference
For built-in shell keywords, we provide the following defaults that are executed by GitHub-hosted runners. You should use these guidelines when running shell scripts.
-
bash
/sh
:- Fail-fast behavior using
set -eo pipefail
: Default forbash
and built-inshell
. It is also the default when you don't provide an option on non-Windows platforms. - You can opt out of fail-fast and take full control by providing a template string to the shell options. For example,
bash {0}
. - sh-like shells exit with the exit code of the last command executed in a script, which is also the default behavior for actions. The runner will report the status of the step as fail/succeed based on this exit code.
- Fail-fast behavior using
-
powershell
/pwsh
- Fail-fast behavior when possible. For
pwsh
andpowershell
built-in shell, we will prepend$ErrorActionPreference = 'stop'
to script contents. - We append
if ((Test-Path -LiteralPath variable:\LASTEXITCODE)) { exit $LASTEXITCODE }
to powershell scripts so action statuses reflect the script's last exit code. - Users can always opt out by not using the built-in shell, and providing a custom shell option like:
pwsh -File {0}
, orpowershell -Command "& '{0}'"
, depending on need.
- Fail-fast behavior when possible. For
-
cmd
- There doesn't seem to be a way to fully opt into fail-fast behavior other than writing your script to check each error code and respond accordingly. Because we can't actually provide that behavior by default, you need to write this behavior into your script.
cmd.exe
will exit with the error level of the last program it executed, and it will return the error code to the runner. This behavior is internally consistent with the previoussh
andpwsh
default behavior and is thecmd.exe
default, so this behavior remains intact.
jobs.<job_id>.steps[*].with
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@main
with:
first_name: Mona
middle_name: The
last_name: Octocat
jobs.<job_id>.steps[*].with.args
A string
that defines the inputs for a Docker container. GitHub passes the args
to the container's ENTRYPOINT
when the container starts up. An array of strings
is not supported by this parameter.
Example
steps:
- name: Explain why this job ran
uses: octo-org/action-name@main
with:
entrypoint: /bin/echo
args: The ${{ github.event_name }} event triggered this step.
The args
are used in place of the CMD
instruction in a Dockerfile
. If you use CMD
in your Dockerfile
, use the guidelines ordered by preference:
- Document required arguments in the action's README and omit them from the
CMD
instruction. - Use defaults that allow using the action without specifying any
args
. - If the action exposes a
--help
flag, or something similar, use that as the default to make your action self-documenting.
jobs.<job_id>.steps[*].with.entrypoint
Overrides the Docker ENTRYPOINT
in the Dockerfile
, or sets it if one wasn't already specified. Unlike the Docker ENTRYPOINT
instruction which has a shell and exec form, entrypoint
keyword accepts only a single string defining the executable to be run.
Example
steps:
- name: Run a custom command
uses: octo-org/action-name@main
with:
entrypoint: /a/different/executable
The entrypoint
keyword is meant to be used with Docker container actions, but you can also use it with JavaScript actions that don't define any inputs.
jobs.<job_id>.steps[*].env
Sets environment variables for steps to use in the runner environment. You can also set environment variables for the entire workflow or a job. For more information, see env
and jobs.<job_id>.env
.
When more than one environment variable is defined with the same name, GitHub uses the most specific environment variable. For example, an environment variable defined in a step will override job and workflow variables with the same name, while the step executes. A variable defined for a job will override a workflow variable with the same name, while the job executes.
Public actions may specify expected environment variables in the README file. If you are setting a secret in an environment variable, you must set secrets using the secrets
context. For more information, see "Using environment variables" and "Contexts."
Example
steps:
- name: My first action
env:
GITHUB_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
FIRST_NAME: Mona
LAST_NAME: Octocat
jobs.<job_id>.steps[*].continue-on-error
Prevents a job from failing when a step fails. Set to true
to allow a job to pass when this step fails.
jobs.<job_id>.steps[*].timeout-minutes
The maximum number of minutes to run the step before killing the process.
jobs.<job_id>.timeout-minutes
The maximum number of minutes to let a job run before GitHub automatically cancels it. Default: 360
If the timeout exceeds the job execution time limit for the runner, the job will be canceled when the execution time limit is met instead. For more information about job execution time limits, see "Usage limits, billing, and administration."
jobs.<job_id>.strategy
A strategy creates a build matrix for your jobs. You can define different variations to run each job in.
jobs.<job_id>.strategy.matrix
You can define a matrix of different job configurations. A matrix allows you to create multiple jobs by performing variable substitution in a single job definition. For example, you can use a matrix to create jobs for more than one supported version of a programming language, operating system, or tool. A matrix reuses the job's configuration and creates a job for each matrix you configure.
A job matrix can generate a maximum of 256 jobs per workflow run. This limit also applies to self-hosted runners.
Each option you define in the matrix
has a key and value. The keys you define become properties in the matrix
context and you can reference the property in other areas of your workflow file. For example, if you define the key os
that contains an array of operating systems, you can use the matrix.os
property as the value of the runs-on
keyword to create a job for each operating system. For more information, see "Contexts."
The order that you define a matrix
matters. The first option you define will be the first job that runs in your workflow.
Example: Running multiple versions of Node.js
You can specify a matrix by supplying an array for the configuration options. For example, if the runner supports Node.js versions 10, 12, and 14, you could specify an array of those versions in the matrix
.
This example creates a matrix of three jobs by setting the node
key to an array of three Node.js versions. To use the matrix, the example sets the matrix.node
context property as the value of the setup-node
action's input parameter node-version
. As a result, three jobs will run, each using a different Node.js version.
strategy:
matrix:
node: [10, 12, 14]
steps:
# Configures the node version used on GitHub-hosted runners
- uses: actions/setup-node@v2
with:
# The Node.js version to configure
node-version: ${{ matrix.node }}
The setup-node
action is the recommended way to configure a Node.js version when using GitHub-hosted runners. For more information, see the setup-node
action.
Example: Running with multiple operating systems
You can create a matrix to run workflows on more than one runner operating system. You can also specify more than one matrix configuration. This example creates a matrix of 6 jobs:
- 2 operating systems specified in the
os
array - 3 Node.js versions specified in the
node
array
When you define a matrix of operating systems, you must set the value of runs-on
to the matrix.os
context property you defined.
runs-on: ${{ matrix.os }}
strategy:
matrix:
os: [ubuntu-18.04, ubuntu-20.04]
node: [10, 12, 14]
steps:
- uses: actions/setup-node@v2
with:
node-version: ${{ matrix.node }}
To find supported configuration options for GitHub-hosted runners, see "Virtual environments for GitHub-hosted runners."
Example: Including additional values into combinations
You can add additional configuration options to a build matrix job that already exists. For example, if you want to use a specific version of npm
when the job that uses windows-latest
and version 8 of node
runs, you can use include
to specify that additional option.
runs-on: ${{ matrix.os }}
strategy:
matrix:
os: [macos-latest, windows-latest, ubuntu-18.04]
node: [8, 10, 12, 14]
include:
# includes a new variable of npm with a value of 6
# for the matrix leg matching the os and version
- os: windows-latest
node: 8
npm: 6
Example: Including new combinations
You can use include
to add new jobs to a build matrix. Any unmatched include configurations are added to the matrix. For example, if you want to use node
version 14 to build on multiple operating systems, but wanted one extra experimental job using node version 15 on Ubuntu, you can use include
to specify that additional job.
runs-on: ${{ matrix.os }}
strategy:
matrix:
node: [14]
os: [macos-latest, windows-latest, ubuntu-18.04]
include:
- node: 15
os: ubuntu-18.04
experimental: true
Example: Excluding configurations from a matrix
You can remove a specific configurations defined in the build matrix using the exclude
option. Using exclude
removes a job defined by the build matrix. The number of jobs is the cross product of the number of operating systems (os
) included in the arrays you provide, minus any subtractions (exclude
).
runs-on: ${{ matrix.os }}
strategy:
matrix:
os: [macos-latest, windows-latest, ubuntu-18.04]
node: [8, 10, 12, 14]
exclude:
# excludes node 8 on macOS
- os: macos-latest
node: 8
Note: All include
combinations are processed after exclude
. This allows you to use include
to add back combinations that were previously excluded.
Using environment variables in a matrix
You can add custom environment variables for each test combination by using the include
key. You can then refer to the custom environment variables in a later step.
In this example, the matrix entries for node-version
are each configured to use different values for the site
and datacenter
environment variables. The Echo site details
step then uses env: ${{ matrix.env }}
to refer to the custom variables:
name: Node.js CI
on: [push]
jobs:
build:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
strategy:
matrix:
include:
- node-version: 10.x
site: "prod"
datacenter: "site-a"
- node-version: 12.x
site: "dev"
datacenter: "site-b"
steps:
- name: Echo site details
env:
SITE: ${{ matrix.site }}
DATACENTER: ${{ matrix.datacenter }}
run: echo $SITE $DATACENTER
jobs.<job_id>.strategy.fail-fast
When set to true
, GitHub cancels all in-progress jobs if any matrix
job fails. Default: true
jobs.<job_id>.strategy.max-parallel
The maximum number of jobs that can run simultaneously when using a matrix
job strategy. By default, GitHub will maximize the number of jobs run in parallel depending on the available runners on GitHub-hosted virtual machines.
strategy:
max-parallel: 2
jobs.<job_id>.continue-on-error
Prevents a workflow run from failing when a job fails. Set to true
to allow a workflow run to pass when this job fails.
Example: Preventing a specific failing matrix job from failing a workflow run
You can allow specific jobs in a job matrix to fail without failing the workflow run. For example, if you wanted to only allow an experimental job with node
set to 15
to fail without failing the workflow run.
runs-on: ${{ matrix.os }}
continue-on-error: ${{ matrix.experimental }}
strategy:
fail-fast: false
matrix:
node: [13, 14]
os: [macos-latest, ubuntu-18.04]
experimental: [false]
include:
- node: 15
os: ubuntu-18.04
experimental: true
jobs.<job_id>.container
A container to run any steps in a job that don't already specify a container. If you have steps that use both script and container actions, the container actions will run as sibling containers on the same network with the same volume mounts.
If you do not set a container
, all steps will run directly on the host specified by runs-on
unless a step refers to an action configured to run in a container.
Example
jobs:
my_job:
container:
image: node:14.16
env:
NODE_ENV: development
ports:
- 80
volumes:
- my_docker_volume:/volume_mount
options: --cpus 1
When you only specify a container image, you can omit the image
keyword.
jobs:
my_job:
container: node:14.16
jobs.<job_id>.container.image
The Docker image to use as the container to run the action. The value can be the Docker Hub image name or a public registry name.
jobs.<job_id>.container.env
Sets a map
of environment variables in the container.
jobs.<job_id>.container.ports
Sets an array
of ports to expose on the container.
jobs.<job_id>.container.volumes
Sets an array
of volumes for the container to use. You can use volumes to share data between services or other steps in a job. You can specify named Docker volumes, anonymous Docker volumes, or bind mounts on the host.
To specify a volume, you specify the source and destination path:
<source>:<destinationPath>
.
The <source>
is a volume name or an absolute path on the host machine, and <destinationPath>
is an absolute path in the container.
Example
volumes:
- my_docker_volume:/volume_mount
- /data/my_data
- /source/directory:/destination/directory
jobs.<job_id>.container.options
Additional Docker container resource options. For a list of options, see "docker create
options."
Warning: The --network
option is not supported.
jobs.<job_id>.services
Note: If your workflows use Docker container actions or service containers, then you must use a Linux runner:
- If you are using GitHub-hosted runners, you must use an Ubuntu runner.
- If you are using self-hosted runners, you must use a Linux machine as your runner and Docker must be installed.
Used to host service containers for a job in a workflow. Service containers are useful for creating databases or cache services like Redis. The runner automatically creates a Docker network and manages the life cycle of the service containers.
If you configure your job to run in a container, or your step uses container actions, you don't need to map ports to access the service or action. Docker automatically exposes all ports between containers on the same Docker user-defined bridge network. You can directly reference the service container by its hostname. The hostname is automatically mapped to the label name you configure for the service in the workflow.
If you configure the job to run directly on the runner machine and your step doesn't use a container action, you must map any required Docker service container ports to the Docker host (the runner machine). You can access the service container using localhost and the mapped port.
For more information about the differences between networking service containers, see "About service containers."
Example: Using localhost
This example creates two services: nginx and redis. When you specify the Docker host port but not the container port, the container port is randomly assigned to a free port. GitHub sets the assigned container port in the ${{job.services.<service_name>.ports}}
context. In this example, you can access the service container ports using the ${{ job.services.nginx.ports['8080'] }}
and ${{ job.services.redis.ports['6379'] }}
contexts.
services:
nginx:
image: nginx
# Map port 8080 on the Docker host to port 80 on the nginx container
ports:
- 8080:80
redis:
image: redis
# Map TCP port 6379 on Docker host to a random free port on the Redis container
ports:
- 6379/tcp
jobs.<job_id>.services.<service_id>.image
The Docker image to use as the service container to run the action. The value can be the Docker Hub image name or a public registry name.
jobs.<job_id>.services.<service_id>.env
Sets a map
of environment variables in the service container.
jobs.<job_id>.services.<service_id>.ports
Sets an array
of ports to expose on the service container.
jobs.<job_id>.services.<service_id>.volumes
Sets an array
of volumes for the service container to use. You can use volumes to share data between services or other steps in a job. You can specify named Docker volumes, anonymous Docker volumes, or bind mounts on the host.
To specify a volume, you specify the source and destination path:
<source>:<destinationPath>
.
The <source>
is a volume name or an absolute path on the host machine, and <destinationPath>
is an absolute path in the container.
Example
volumes:
- my_docker_volume:/volume_mount
- /data/my_data
- /source/directory:/destination/directory
jobs.<job_id>.services.<service_id>.options
Additional Docker container resource options. For a list of options, see "docker create
options."
Warning: The --network
option is not supported.
Filter pattern cheat sheet
You can use special characters in path, branch, and tag filters.
*
: Matches zero or more characters, but does not match the/
character. For example,Octo*
matchesOctocat
.**
: Matches zero or more of any character.?
: Matches zero or one of the preceding character.+
: Matches one or more of the preceding character.[]
Matches one character listed in the brackets or included in ranges. Ranges can only includea-z
,A-Z
, and0-9
. For example, the range[0-9a-z]
matches any digit or lowercase letter. For example,[CB]at
matchesCat
orBat
and[1-2]00
matches100
and200
.!
: At the start of a pattern makes it negate previous positive patterns. It has no special meaning if not the first character.
The characters *
, [
, and !
are special characters in YAML. If you start a pattern with *
, [
, or !
, you must enclose the pattern in quotes.
# Valid
- '**/README.md'
# Invalid - creates a parse error that
# prevents your workflow from running.
- **/README.md
For more information about branch, tag, and path filter syntax, see "on.<push|pull_request>.<branches|tags>
" and "on.<push|pull_request>.paths
."
Patterns to match branches and tags
Pattern | Description | Example matches |
---|---|---|
feature/* | The * wildcard matches any character, but does not match slash (/ ). | feature/my-branch feature/your-branch |
feature/** | The ** wildcard matches any character including slash (/ ) in branch and tag names. | feature/beta-a/my-branch feature/your-branch feature/mona/the/octocat |
main releases/mona-the-octocat | Matches the exact name of a branch or tag name. | main releases/mona-the-octocat |
'*' | Matches all branch and tag names that don't contain a slash (/ ). The * character is a special character in YAML. When you start a pattern with * , you must use quotes. | main releases |
'**' | Matches all branch and tag names. This is the default behavior when you don't use a branches or tags filter. | all/the/branches every/tag |
'*feature' | The * character is a special character in YAML. When you start a pattern with * , you must use quotes. | mona-feature feature ver-10-feature |
v2* | Matches branch and tag names that start with v2 . | v2 v2.0 v2.9 |
v[12].[0-9]+.[0-9]+ | Matches all semantic versioning branches and tags with major version 1 or 2 | v1.10.1 v2.0.0 |
Patterns to match file paths
Path patterns must match the whole path, and start from the repository's root.
Pattern | Description of matches | Example matches |
---|---|---|
'*' | The * wildcard matches any character, but does not match slash (/ ). The * character is a special character in YAML. When you start a pattern with * , you must use quotes. | README.md server.rb |
'*.jsx?' | The ? character matches zero or one of the preceding character. | page.js page.jsx |
'**' | The ** wildcard matches any character including slash (/ ). This is the default behavior when you don't use a path filter. | all/the/files.md |
'*.js' | The * wildcard matches any character, but does not match slash (/ ). Matches all .js files at the root of the repository. | app.js index.js |
'**.js' | Matches all .js files in the repository. | index.js js/index.js src/js/app.js |
docs/* | All files within the root of the docs directory, at the root of the repository. | docs/README.md docs/file.txt |
docs/** | Any files in the /docs directory at the root of the repository. | docs/README.md docs/mona/octocat.txt |
docs/**/*.md | A file with a .md suffix anywhere in the docs directory. | docs/README.md docs/mona/hello-world.md docs/a/markdown/file.md |
'**/docs/**' | Any files in a docs directory anywhere in the repository. | docs/hello.md dir/docs/my-file.txt space/docs/plan/space.doc |
'**/README.md' | A README.md file anywhere in the repository. | README.md js/README.md |
'**/*src/**' | Any file in a folder with a src suffix anywhere in the repository. | a/src/app.js my-src/code/js/app.js |
'**/*-post.md' | A file with the suffix -post.md anywhere in the repository. | my-post.md path/their-post.md |
'**/migrate-*.sql' | A file with the prefix migrate- and suffix .sql anywhere in the repository. | migrate-10909.sql db/migrate-v1.0.sql db/sept/migrate-v1.sql |
*.md !README.md | Using an exclamation mark (! ) in front of a pattern negates it. When a file matches a pattern and also matches a negative pattern defined later in the file, the file will not be included. | hello.md Does not match README.md docs/hello.md |
*.md !README.md README* | Patterns are checked sequentially. A pattern that negates a previous pattern will re-include file paths. | hello.md README.md README.doc |