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GitHub Actions Cookbook

GitHub Actions Cookbook

By : Michael Kaufmann
4.8 (5)
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GitHub Actions Cookbook

GitHub Actions Cookbook

4.8 (5)
By: Michael Kaufmann

Overview of this book

Say goodbye to tedious tasks! GitHub Actions is a powerful workflow engine that automates everything in the GitHub ecosystem, letting you focus on what matters most. This book explains the GitHub Actions workflow syntax, the different kinds of actions, and how GitHub-hosted and self-hosted workflow runners work. You’ll get tips on how to author and debug GitHub Actions and workflows with Visual Studio Code (VS Code), run them locally, and leverage the power of GitHub Copilot. The book uses hands-on examples to walk you through real-world use cases that will help you automate the entire release process. You’ll cover everything, from automating the generation of release notes to building and testing your software and deploying securely to Azure, Amazon Web Services (AWS), or Google Cloud using OpenID Connect (OIDC), secrets, variables, environments, and approval checks. The book goes beyond CI/CD by demonstrating recipes to execute IssueOps and automate other repetitive tasks using the GitHub CLI, GitHub APIs and SDKs, and GitHub Token. You’ll learn how to build your own actions and reusable workflows to share building blocks with the community or within your organization. By the end of this GitHub book, you'll have gained the skills you need to automate tasks and work with remarkable efficiency and agility.
Table of Contents (10 chapters)
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Setting up a self-hosted runner

So far, we have only used the ubuntu-latest label for our jobs. This runs the workflows on the latest version of a Ubuntu image hosted by GitHub. But there are also runners on macOS and Windows, with different configurations. You can host your own runners on any platform you like. In this first recipe, we will set up a self-hosted runner in a Linux Docker container. This way, it will be easy to scale it up and clean up the resources after our workflow run.

Getting ready…

You will need Docker installed for this recipe. You will also need to know your processor architecture. If you don’t know it, just run docker info and look for Architecture:

$ docker info | grep Architecture

How to do it…

  1. Go to a repository on GitHub. You can create a new one or you can use the GitHubActionsCookbook repository, which you created in Chapter 1. Go to Settings | Actions | Runners (/settings/actions/runners) and click on New self-hosted...

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