Introduction
This guide shows you how to create a workflow that publishes Java packages to GitHub Packages and the Maven Central Repository. With a single workflow, you can publish packages to a single repository or to multiple repositories.
Prerequisites
We recommend that you have a basic understanding of workflow files and configuration options. For more information, see Writing workflows.
For more information about creating a CI workflow for your Java project with Maven, see Building and testing Java with Maven.
You may also find it helpful to have a basic understanding of the following:
- Working with the Apache Maven registry
- Store information in variables
- Using secrets in GitHub Actions
- Automatic token authentication
About package configuration
The groupId
and artifactId
fields in the pom.xml file create a unique identifier for your package that registries use to link your package to a registry. For more information see Guide to uploading artifacts to the Central Repository in the Apache Maven documentation.
The pom.xml file also contains configuration for the distribution management repositories that Maven will deploy packages to. Each repository must have a name and a deployment URL. Authentication for these repositories can be configured in the .m2/settings.xml file in the home directory of the user running Maven.
You can use the setup-java
action to configure the deployment repository as well as authentication for that repository. For more information, see setup-java
.
Publishing packages to the Maven Central Repository
Each time you create a new release, you can trigger a workflow to publish your package. The workflow in the example below runs when the release
event triggers with type created
. The workflow publishes the package to the Maven Central Repository if CI tests pass. For more information on the release
event, see Events that trigger workflows.
In this workflow, you can use the setup-java
action. This action installs the given version of the JDK into the PATH
, but it also configures a Maven settings.xml for publishing packages. By default, the settings file will be configured for GitHub Packages, but it can be configured to deploy to another package registry, such as the Maven Central Repository. If you already have a distribution management repository configured in pom.xml, then you can specify that id
during the setup-java
action invocation.
For example, if you were deploying to the Maven Central Repository through the OSSRH hosting project, your pom.xml could specify a distribution management repository with the id
of ossrh
.
<project ...> ... <distributionManagement> <repository> <id>ossrh</id> <name>Central Repository OSSRH</name> <url>https://oss.sonatype.org/service/local/staging/deploy/maven2/</url> </repository> </distributionManagement> </project>
<project ...>
...
<distributionManagement>
<repository>
<id>ossrh</id>
<name>Central Repository OSSRH</name>
<url>https://oss.sonatype.org/service/local/staging/deploy/maven2/</url>
</repository>
</distributionManagement>
</project>
With this configuration, you can create a workflow that publishes your package to the Maven Central Repository by specifying the repository management id
to the setup-java
action. You’ll also need to provide environment variables that contain the username and password to authenticate to the repository.
In the deploy step, you’ll need to set the environment variables to the username that you authenticate with to the repository, and to a secret that you’ve configured with the password or token to authenticate with. For more information, see Using secrets in GitHub Actions.
name: Publish package to the Maven Central Repository on: release: types: [created] jobs: publish: runs-on: ubuntu-latest steps: - uses: actions/checkout@v4 - name: Set up Maven Central Repository uses: actions/setup-java@v4 with: java-version: '11' distribution: 'temurin' server-id: ossrh server-username: MAVEN_USERNAME server-password: MAVEN_PASSWORD - name: Publish package run: mvn --batch-mode deploy env: MAVEN_USERNAME: ${{ secrets.OSSRH_USERNAME }} MAVEN_PASSWORD: ${{ secrets.OSSRH_TOKEN }}
name: Publish package to the Maven Central Repository
on:
release:
types: [created]
jobs:
publish:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v4
- name: Set up Maven Central Repository
uses: actions/setup-java@v4
with:
java-version: '11'
distribution: 'temurin'
server-id: ossrh
server-username: MAVEN_USERNAME
server-password: MAVEN_PASSWORD
- name: Publish package
run: mvn --batch-mode deploy
env:
MAVEN_USERNAME: ${{ secrets.OSSRH_USERNAME }}
MAVEN_PASSWORD: ${{ secrets.OSSRH_TOKEN }}
This workflow performs the following steps:
-
Checks out a copy of project's repository.
-
Sets up the Java JDK, and also configures the Maven settings.xml file to add authentication for the
ossrh
repository using theMAVEN_USERNAME
andMAVEN_PASSWORD
environment variables. -
Runs the
mvn --batch-mode deploy
command to publish to theossrh
repository. TheMAVEN_USERNAME
environment variable will be set with the contents of yourOSSRH_USERNAME
secret, and theMAVEN_PASSWORD
environment variable will be set with the contents of yourOSSRH_TOKEN
secret.For more information about using secrets in your workflow, see Using secrets in GitHub Actions.
Publishing packages to GitHub Packages
Each time you create a new release, you can trigger a workflow to publish your package. The workflow in the example below runs when the release
event triggers with type created
. The workflow publishes the package to GitHub Packages if CI tests pass. For more information on the release
event, see Events that trigger workflows.
In this workflow, you can use the setup-java
action. This action installs the given version of the JDK into the PATH
, and also sets up a Maven settings.xml for publishing the package to GitHub Packages. The generated settings.xml defines authentication for a server with an id
of github
, using the GITHUB_ACTOR
environment variable as the username and the GITHUB_TOKEN
environment variable as the password. The GITHUB_TOKEN
environment variable is assigned the value of the special GITHUB_TOKEN
secret.
The GITHUB_TOKEN
secret is set to an access token for the repository each time a job in a workflow begins. You should set the permissions for this access token in the workflow file to grant read access for the contents
permission and write access for the packages
permission. For more information, see "Automatic token authentication."
For a Maven-based project, you can make use of these settings by creating a distribution repository in your pom.xml file with an id
of github
that points to your GitHub Packages endpoint.
For example, if your organization is named "octocat" and your repository is named "hello-world", then the GitHub Packages configuration in pom.xml would look similar to the below example.
<project ...> ... <distributionManagement> <repository> <id>github</id> <name>GitHub Packages</name> <url>https://maven.pkg.github.com/octocat/hello-world</url> </repository> </distributionManagement> </project>
<project ...>
...
<distributionManagement>
<repository>
<id>github</id>
<name>GitHub Packages</name>
<url>https://maven.pkg.github.com/octocat/hello-world</url>
</repository>
</distributionManagement>
</project>
With this configuration, you can create a workflow that publishes your package to GitHub Packages by making use of the automatically generated settings.xml.
name: Publish package to GitHub Packages on: release: types: [created] jobs: publish: runs-on: ubuntu-latest permissions: contents: read packages: write steps: - uses: actions/checkout@v4 - uses: actions/setup-java@v4 with: java-version: '11' distribution: 'temurin' - name: Publish package run: mvn --batch-mode deploy env: GITHUB_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
name: Publish package to GitHub Packages
on:
release:
types: [created]
jobs:
publish:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
permissions:
contents: read
packages: write
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v4
- uses: actions/setup-java@v4
with:
java-version: '11'
distribution: 'temurin'
- name: Publish package
run: mvn --batch-mode deploy
env:
GITHUB_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
This workflow performs the following steps:
-
Checks out a copy of project's repository.
-
Sets up the Java JDK, and also automatically configures the Maven settings.xml file to add authentication for the
github
Maven repository to use theGITHUB_TOKEN
environment variable. -
Runs the
mvn --batch-mode deploy
command to publish to GitHub Packages. TheGITHUB_TOKEN
environment variable will be set with the contents of theGITHUB_TOKEN
secret. Thepermissions
key specifies the access granted to theGITHUB_TOKEN
.For more information about using secrets in your workflow, see Using secrets in GitHub Actions.
Publishing packages to the Maven Central Repository and GitHub Packages
You can publish your packages to both the Maven Central Repository and GitHub Packages by using the setup-java
action for each registry.
Ensure your pom.xml file includes a distribution management repository for both your GitHub repository and your Maven Central Repository provider. For example, if you deploy to the Central Repository through the OSSRH hosting project, you might want to specify it in a distribution management repository with the id
set to ossrh
, and you might want to specify GitHub Packages in a distribution management repository with the id
set to github
.
name: Publish package to the Maven Central Repository and GitHub Packages on: release: types: [created] jobs: publish: runs-on: ubuntu-latest permissions: contents: read packages: write steps: - uses: actions/checkout@v4 - name: Set up Java for publishing to Maven Central Repository uses: actions/setup-java@v4 with: java-version: '11' distribution: 'temurin' server-id: ossrh server-username: MAVEN_USERNAME server-password: MAVEN_PASSWORD - name: Publish to the Maven Central Repository run: mvn --batch-mode deploy env: MAVEN_USERNAME: ${{ secrets.OSSRH_USERNAME }} MAVEN_PASSWORD: ${{ secrets.OSSRH_TOKEN }} - name: Set up Java for publishing to GitHub Packages uses: actions/setup-java@v4 with: java-version: '11' distribution: 'temurin' - name: Publish to GitHub Packages run: mvn --batch-mode deploy env: GITHUB_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
name: Publish package to the Maven Central Repository and GitHub Packages
on:
release:
types: [created]
jobs:
publish:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
permissions:
contents: read
packages: write
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v4
- name: Set up Java for publishing to Maven Central Repository
uses: actions/setup-java@v4
with:
java-version: '11'
distribution: 'temurin'
server-id: ossrh
server-username: MAVEN_USERNAME
server-password: MAVEN_PASSWORD
- name: Publish to the Maven Central Repository
run: mvn --batch-mode deploy
env:
MAVEN_USERNAME: ${{ secrets.OSSRH_USERNAME }}
MAVEN_PASSWORD: ${{ secrets.OSSRH_TOKEN }}
- name: Set up Java for publishing to GitHub Packages
uses: actions/setup-java@v4
with:
java-version: '11'
distribution: 'temurin'
- name: Publish to GitHub Packages
run: mvn --batch-mode deploy
env:
GITHUB_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
This workflow calls the setup-java
action twice. Each time the setup-java
action runs, it overwrites the Maven settings.xml file for publishing packages. For authentication to the repository, the settings.xml file references the distribution management repository id
, and the username and password.
This workflow performs the following steps:
-
Checks out a copy of project's repository.
-
Calls
setup-java
the first time. This configures the Maven settings.xml file for theossrh
repository, and sets the authentication options to environment variables that are defined in the next step. -
Runs the
mvn --batch-mode deploy
command to publish to theossrh
repository. TheMAVEN_USERNAME
environment variable will be set with the contents of yourOSSRH_USERNAME
secret, and theMAVEN_PASSWORD
environment variable will be set with the contents of yourOSSRH_TOKEN
secret. -
Calls
setup-java
the second time. This automatically configures the Maven settings.xml file for GitHub Packages. -
Runs the
mvn --batch-mode deploy
command to publish to GitHub Packages. TheGITHUB_TOKEN
environment variable will be set with the contents of theGITHUB_TOKEN
secret. Thepermissions
key specifies the access granted to theGITHUB_TOKEN
.For more information about using secrets in your workflow, see Using secrets in GitHub Actions.