Note: GitHub Actions was available for GitHub Enterprise Server 2.22 as a limited beta. The beta has ended. GitHub Actions is now generally available in GitHub Enterprise Server 3.0 or later. For more information, see the GitHub Enterprise Server 3.0 release notes.
- For more information about upgrading to GitHub Enterprise Server 3.0 or later, see "Upgrading GitHub Enterprise Server."
- For more information about configuring GitHub Actions after you upgrade, see the documentation for GitHub Enterprise Server 3.0.
Note: GitHub-hosted runners are not currently supported on GitHub Enterprise Server. You can see more information about planned future support on the GitHub public roadmap.
Overview
The actions you use in your workflow can be defined in:
- A public repository
- The same repository where your workflow file references the action
- A published Docker container image on Docker Hub
GitHub Marketplace is a central location for you to find actions created by the GitHub community.
Note: GitHub Actions on your GitHub Enterprise Server instance may have limited access to actions on GitHub.com or GitHub Marketplace. For more information, see "Managing access to actions from GitHub.com" and contact your GitHub Enterprise site administrator.
Using release management for your custom actions
The creators of a community action have the option to use tags, branches, or SHA values to manage releases of the action. Similar to any dependency, you should indicate the version of the action you'd like to use based on your comfort with automatically accepting updates to the action.
You will designate the version of the action in your workflow file. Check the action's documentation for information on their approach to release management, and to see which tag, branch, or SHA value to use.
Note: We recommend that you use a SHA value when using third-party actions. For more information, see Security hardening for GitHub Actions
Using tags
Tags are useful for letting you decide when to switch between major and minor versions, but these are more ephemeral and can be moved or deleted by the maintainer. This example demonstrates how to target an action that's been tagged as v1.0.1
:
steps:
- uses: actions/javascript-action@v1.0.1
Using SHAs
If you need more reliable versioning, you should use the SHA value associated with the version of the action. SHAs are immutable and therefore more reliable than tags or branches. However this approach means you will not automatically receive updates for an action, including important bug fixes and security updates. This example targets an action's SHA:
steps:
- uses: actions/javascript-action@172239021f7ba04fe7327647b213799853a9eb89
Using branches
Specifying a target branch for the action means it will always run the version currently on that branch. This approach can create problems if an update to the branch includes breaking changes. This example targets a branch named @main
:
steps:
- uses: actions/javascript-action@main
For more information, see "Using release management for actions."
Using inputs and outputs with an action
An action often accepts or requires inputs and generates outputs that you can use. For example, an action might require you to specify a path to a file, the name of a label, or other data it will use as part of the action processing.
To see the inputs and outputs of an action, check the action.yml
or action.yaml
in the root directory of the repository.
In this example action.yml
, the inputs
keyword defines a required input called file-path
, and includes a default value that will be used if none is specified. The outputs
keyword defines an output called results-file
, which tells you where to locate the results.
name: "Example"
description: "Receives file and generates output"
inputs:
file-path: # id of input
description: "Path to test script"
required: true
default: "test-file.js"
outputs:
results-file: # id of output
description: "Path to results file"
Referencing an action in the same repository where a workflow file uses the action
If an action is defined in the same repository where your workflow file uses the action, you can reference the action with either the {owner}/{repo}@{ref}
or ./path/to/dir
syntax in your workflow file.
Example repository file structure:
|-- hello-world (repository)
| |__ .github
| └── workflows
| └── my-first-workflow.yml
| └── actions
| |__ hello-world-action
| └── action.yml
Example workflow file:
jobs:
build:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
# This step checks out a copy of your repository.
- uses: actions/checkout@v2
# This step references the directory that contains the action.
- uses: ./.github/actions/hello-world-action
The action.yml
file is used to provide metadata for the action. Learn about the content of this file in "Metadata syntax for GitHub Actions"
Referencing a container on Docker Hub
If an action is defined in a published Docker container image on Docker Hub, you must reference the action with the docker://{image}:{tag}
syntax in your workflow file. To protect your code and data, we strongly recommend you verify the integrity of the Docker container image from Docker Hub before using it in your workflow.
jobs:
my_first_job:
steps:
- name: My first step
uses: docker://alpine:3.8
For some examples of Docker actions, see the Docker-image.yml workflow and "Creating a Docker container action."
Next steps
To continue learning about GitHub Actions, see "Essential features of GitHub Actions."