Book Image

Automating Workflows with GitHub Actions

By : Priscila Heller
Book Image

Automating Workflows with GitHub Actions

By: Priscila Heller

Overview of this book

GitHub Actions is one of the most popular products that enables you to automate development tasks and improve your software development workflow. Automating Workflows with GitHub Actions uses real-world examples to help you automate everyday tasks and use your resources efficiently. This book takes a practical approach to helping you develop the skills needed to create complex YAML files to automate your daily tasks. You'll learn how to find and use existing workflows, allowing you to get started with GitHub Actions right away. Moving on, you'll discover complex concepts and practices such as self-hosted runners and writing workflow files that leverage other platforms such as Docker as well as programming languages such as Java and JavaScript. As you advance, you'll be able to write your own JavaScript, Docker, and composite run steps actions, and publish them in GitHub Marketplace! You'll also find instructions to migrate your existing CI/CD workflows into GitHub Actions from platforms like Travis CI and GitLab. Finally, you'll explore tools that'll help you stay informed of additions to GitHub Actions along with finding technical support and staying engaged with the community. By the end of this GitHub book, you'll have developed the skills and experience needed to build and maintain your own CI/CD pipeline using GitHub Actions.
Table of Contents (14 chapters)
1
Section 1:Introduction and Overview of Technologies Used with GitHub Actions
4
Section 2: Advanced Concepts and Hands-On Exercises to Create Actions
9
Section 3: Customizing Existing Actions, Migrations, and the Future of GitHub Actions

Summary

In this chapter, you deepened your knowledge of workflows. You navigated through several examples that showed how webhook events can trigger GitHub Actions workflows. You also learned about the many ways keys can be used in a workflow file to authenticate it, such as GITHUB_TOKEN and PATs. You wrote more complex workflows using contexts and expressions.

Finally, you read about workflow run logs, and you performed the steps to enable additional debugging, which will help you manage your workflow runs and debug any failures you may come across.

With the skills you have gathered from this chapter, you are ready to start practicing and creating workflow files to help automate everyday tasks. These skills will be very convenient when you dig into Chapter 5, Writing your Own Actions, which will guide you in creating actions from scratch.