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Mastering GitHub Actions

Mastering GitHub Actions

By : Eric Chapman
4.5 (6)
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Mastering GitHub Actions

Mastering GitHub Actions

4.5 (6)
By: Eric Chapman

Overview of this book

Navigating GitHub Actions often leaves developers grappling with inefficiencies and collaboration bottlenecks. Mastering GitHub Actions offers solutions to these challenges, ensuring smoother software development. With 16 extensive chapters, this book simplifies GitHub Actions, walking you through its vast capabilities, from team and enterprise features to organization defaults, self-hosted runners, and monitoring tools. You’ll learn how to craft reusable workflows, design bespoke templates, publish actions, incorporate external services, and introduce enhanced security measures. Through hands-on examples, you’ll gain best-practice insights for team-based GitHub Actions workflows and discover strategies for maximizing organization accounts. Whether you’re a software engineer or a DevOps guru, by the end of this book, you'll be adept at amplifying productivity and leveraging automation's might to refine your development process.
Table of Contents (22 chapters)
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Part 1:Centralized Workflows to Assist with Governance
7
Part 2: Implementing Advanced Patterns within Actions
14
Part 3: Best Practices, Patterns, Tricks, and Tips Toolkit

Authorizing our deployments with Azure and OIDC

In this section, we will set up Azure so that we can authorize as our service principal using OIDC, which will have the required access rights to deploy to our infrastructure within an environment. As we covered OIDC in the previous chapter, we’ll jump into some specifics of Azure Identity and the steps required to roll this out.

There are a couple of ways to achieve this: we could set up an application or a GitHub credential under the Certificate & secrets section of the application in Azure. Those options are self-explanatory in the Microsoft Learn documents if you want to use them, and they provide a lot of launch and provision steps.

I will show you the Other issuer for Federated credential scenario to authenticate with a service principal, which allows you to set up an OIDC configuration with a few more options, making it more flexible for our use case.

To do this, what’s required here is a managed identity...

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