Restrictions when Dependabot triggers events
Dependabot is able to trigger GitHub Actions workflows on its pull requests and comments; however, certain events are treated differently.
For workflows initiated by Dependabot (github.actor == 'dependabot[bot]'
) using the pull_request
, pull_request_review
, pull_request_review_comment
, push
, create
, deployment
, and deployment_status
events, these restrictions apply:
GITHUB_TOKEN
has read-only permissions by default.- Secrets are populated from Dependabot secrets. GitHub Actions secrets are not available.
For workflows initiated by Dependabot (github.actor == 'dependabot[bot]'
) using the pull_request_target
event, if the base ref of the pull request was created by Dependabot (github.event.pull_request.user.login == 'dependabot[bot]'
), the GITHUB_TOKEN
will be read-only and secrets are not available.
These restrictions apply even if the workflow is re-run by a different actor.
For more information, see Keeping your GitHub Actions and workflows secure: Preventing pwn requests.
Troubleshooting failures when Dependabot triggers existing workflows
After you set up Dependabot updates for your GitHub Enterprise Server instance, you may see failures when existing workflows are triggered by Dependabot events.
By default, GitHub Actions workflow runs that are triggered by Dependabot from push
, pull_request
, pull_request_review
, or pull_request_review_comment
events are treated as if they were opened from a repository fork. Unlike workflows triggered by other actors, this means they receive a read-only GITHUB_TOKEN
and do not have access to any secrets that are normally available. This will cause any workflows that attempt to write to the repository to fail when they are triggered by Dependabot.
There are three ways to resolve this problem:
- You can update your workflows so that they are no longer triggered by Dependabot using an expression like:
if: github.actor != 'dependabot[bot]'
. For more information, see Evaluate expressions in workflows and actions. - You can modify your workflows to use a two-step process that includes
pull_request_target
which does not have these limitations. For more information, see Troubleshooting Dependabot on GitHub Actions. - You can provide workflows triggered by Dependabot access to secrets and allow the
permissions
term to increase the default scope of theGITHUB_TOKEN
.
Some troubleshooting advice is provided in this article. You can also see Workflow syntax for GitHub Actions.
Accessing secrets
When a Dependabot event triggers a workflow, the only secrets available to the workflow are Dependabot secrets. GitHub Actions secrets are not available. You must therefore store any secrets that are used by a workflow triggered by Dependabot events as Dependabot secrets. For more information, see Configuring access to private registries for Dependabot.
Dependabot secrets are added to the secrets
context and referenced using exactly the same syntax as secrets for GitHub Actions. For more information, see Using secrets in GitHub Actions.
If you have a workflow that will be triggered by Dependabot and also by other actors, the simplest solution is to store the token with the permissions required in an action and in a Dependabot secret with identical names. Then the workflow can include a single call to these secrets. If the secret for Dependabot has a different name, use conditions to specify the correct secrets for different actors to use.
For examples that use conditions, see Automating Dependabot with GitHub Actions.
To access a private container registry on AWS with a user name and password, a workflow must include a secret for username
and password
.
In this example, when Dependabot triggers the workflow, the Dependabot secrets with the names READONLY_AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID
and READONLY_AWS_ACCESS_KEY
are used. If another actor triggers the workflow, the actions secrets with those names are used.
name: CI on: pull_request: branches: [ main ] jobs: build: runs-on: ubuntu-latest steps: - name: Checkout repository uses: actions/checkout@v4 - name: Login to private container registry for dependencies uses: docker/login-action@3b4c5d6e7f8a9b0c1d2e3f4a5b6c7d8e9f0a1b2c with: registry: https://1234567890.dkr.ecr.us-east-1.amazonaws.com username: ${{ secrets.READONLY_AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID }} password: ${{ secrets.READONLY_AWS_ACCESS_KEY }} - name: Build the Docker image run: docker build . --file Dockerfile --tag my-image-name:$(date +%s)
name: CI
on:
pull_request:
branches: [ main ]
jobs:
build:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- name: Checkout repository
uses: actions/checkout@v4
- name: Login to private container registry for dependencies
uses: docker/login-action@3b4c5d6e7f8a9b0c1d2e3f4a5b6c7d8e9f0a1b2c
with:
registry: https://1234567890.dkr.ecr.us-east-1.amazonaws.com
username: ${{ secrets.READONLY_AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID }}
password: ${{ secrets.READONLY_AWS_ACCESS_KEY }}
- name: Build the Docker image
run: docker build . --file Dockerfile --tag my-image-name:$(date +%s)
Changing GITHUB_TOKEN
permissions
By default, GitHub Actions workflows triggered by Dependabot get a GITHUB_TOKEN
with read-only permissions. You can use the permissions
key in your workflow to increase the access for the token:
name: CI on: pull_request # Set the access for individual scopes, or use permissions: write-all permissions: pull-requests: write issues: write repository-projects: write ... jobs: ...
name: CI
on: pull_request
# Set the access for individual scopes, or use permissions: write-all
permissions:
pull-requests: write
issues: write
repository-projects: write
...
jobs:
...
For more information, see Automatic token authentication.
Manually re-running a workflow
When you manually re-run a Dependabot workflow, it will run with the same privileges as before even if the user who initiated the rerun has different privileges. For more information, see Re-running workflows and jobs.