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.
About workflow artifacts
Artifacts allow you to persist data after a job has completed, and share that data with another job in the same workflow. An artifact is a file or collection of files produced during a workflow run. For example, you can use artifacts to save your build and test output after a workflow run has ended. All actions and workflows called within a run have write access to that run's artifacts.
By default, GitHub Enterprise Server stores build logs and artifacts for 90 days, and this retention period can be customized. For more information, see "Usage limits, billing, and administration." The retention period for a pull request restarts each time someone pushes a new commit to the pull request.
These are some of the common artifacts that you can upload:
- Log files and core dumps
- Test results, failures, and screenshots
- Binary or compressed files
- Stress test performance output and code coverage results
Artifacts consume storage space on the external blob storage that is configured for GitHub Actions on GitHub Enterprise Server.
Artifacts are uploaded during a workflow run, and you can view an artifact's name and size in the UI. When an artifact is downloaded using the GitHub Enterprise Server UI, all files that were individually uploaded as part of the artifact get zipped together into a single file. This means that billing is calculated based on the size of the uploaded artifact and not the size of the zip file.
GitHub Enterprise Server provides two actions that you can use to upload and download build artifacts. For more information, see the upload-artifact
and download-artifact
actions on GitHub Enterprise Server.
To share data between jobs:
- Uploading files: Give the uploaded file a name and upload the data before the job ends.
- Downloading files: You can only download artifacts that were uploaded during the same workflow run. When you download a file, you can reference it by name.
The steps of a job share the same environment on the runner machine, but run in their own individual processes. To pass data between steps in a job, you can use inputs and outputs. For more information about inputs and outputs, see "Metadata syntax for GitHub Actions."
Comparing artifacts and dependency caching
Artifacts and caching are similar because they provide the ability to store files on GitHub, but each feature offers different use cases and cannot be used interchangeably.
- Use caching when you want to reuse files that don't change often between jobs or workflow runs, such as build dependencies from a package management system.
- Use artifacts when you want to save files produced by a job to view after a workflow run has ended, such as built binaries or build logs.
For more information on dependency caching, see "Caching dependencies to speed up workflows."
Uploading build and test artifacts
You can create a continuous integration (CI) workflow to build and test your code. For more information about using GitHub Actions to perform CI, see "About continuous integration with GitHub Actions."
The output of building and testing your code often produces files you can use to debug test failures and production code that you can deploy. You can configure a workflow to build and test the code pushed to your repository and report a success or failure status. You can upload the build and test output to use for deployments, debugging failed tests or crashes, and viewing test suite coverage.
You can use the upload-artifact
action to upload artifacts. When uploading an artifact, you can specify a single file or directory, or multiple files or directories. You can also exclude certain files or directories, and use wildcard patterns. We recommend that you provide a name for an artifact, but if no name is provided then artifact
will be used as the default name. For more information on syntax, see the actions/upload-artifact
action on GitHub Enterprise Server.
Example
For example, your repository or a web application might contain SASS and TypeScript files that you must convert to CSS and JavaScript. Assuming your build configuration outputs the compiled files in the dist
directory, you would deploy the files in the dist
directory to your web application server if all tests completed successfully.
|-- hello-world (repository)
| └── dist
| └── tests
| └── src
| └── sass/app.scss
| └── app.ts
| └── output
| └── test
|
This example shows you how to create a workflow for a Node.js project that builds the code in the src
directory and runs the tests in the tests
directory. You can assume that running npm test
produces a code coverage report named code-coverage.html
stored in the output/test/
directory.
The workflow uploads the production artifacts in the dist
directory, but excludes any markdown files. It also uploads the code-coverage.html
report as another artifact.
name: Node CI on: [push] jobs: build_and_test: runs-on: ubuntu-latest steps: - name: Checkout repository uses: actions/checkout@v4 - name: npm install, build, and test run: | npm install npm run build --if-present npm test - name: Archive production artifacts uses: actions/upload-artifact@v3 with: name: dist-without-markdown path: | dist !dist/**/*.md - name: Archive code coverage results uses: actions/upload-artifact@v3 with: name: code-coverage-report path: output/test/code-coverage.html
name: Node CI
on: [push]
jobs:
build_and_test:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- name: Checkout repository
uses: actions/checkout@v4
- name: npm install, build, and test
run: |
npm install
npm run build --if-present
npm test
- name: Archive production artifacts
uses: actions/upload-artifact@v3
with:
name: dist-without-markdown
path: |
dist
!dist/**/*.md
- name: Archive code coverage results
uses: actions/upload-artifact@v3
with:
name: code-coverage-report
path: output/test/code-coverage.html
Configuring a custom artifact retention period
You can define a custom retention period for individual artifacts created by a workflow. When using a workflow to create a new artifact, you can use retention-days
with the upload-artifact
action. This example demonstrates how to set a custom retention period of 5 days for the artifact named my-artifact
:
- name: 'Upload Artifact' uses: actions/upload-artifact@v3 with: name: my-artifact path: my_file.txt retention-days: 5
- name: 'Upload Artifact'
uses: actions/upload-artifact@v3
with:
name: my-artifact
path: my_file.txt
retention-days: 5
The retention-days
value cannot exceed the retention limit set by the repository, organization, or enterprise.
Downloading or deleting artifacts
During a workflow run, you can use the download-artifact
action to download artifacts that were previously uploaded in the same workflow run.
After a workflow run has been completed, you can download or delete artifacts on GitHub or using the REST API. For more information, see "Downloading workflow artifacts," "Removing workflow artifacts," and "REST API endpoints for GitHub Actions artifacts."
Downloading artifacts during a workflow run
The actions/download-artifact
action can be used to download previously uploaded artifacts during a workflow run.
Note
You can only download artifacts in a workflow that were uploaded during the same workflow run.
Specify an artifact's name to download an individual artifact. If you uploaded an artifact without specifying a name, the default name is artifact
.
- name: Download a single artifact
uses: actions/download-artifact@v3
with:
name: my-artifact
You can also download all artifacts in a workflow run by not specifying a name. This can be useful if you are working with lots of artifacts.
- name: Download all workflow run artifacts
uses: actions/download-artifact@v3
If you download all workflow run's artifacts, a directory for each artifact is created using its name.
For more information on syntax, see the actions/download-artifact
action on GitHub Enterprise Server.
Passing data between jobs in a workflow
You can use the upload-artifact
and download-artifact
actions to share data between jobs in a workflow. This example workflow illustrates how to pass data between jobs in the same workflow. For more information, see the actions/upload-artifact
and download-artifact
actions on GitHub Enterprise Server.
Jobs that are dependent on a previous job's artifacts must wait for the dependent job to complete successfully. This workflow uses the needs
keyword to ensure that job_1
, job_2
, and job_3
run sequentially. For example, job_2
requires job_1
using the needs: job_1
syntax.
Job 1 performs these steps:
- Performs a math calculation and saves the result to a text file called
math-homework.txt
. - Uses the
upload-artifact
action to upload themath-homework.txt
file with the artifact namehomework
.
Job 2 uses the result in the previous job:
- Downloads the
homework
artifact uploaded in the previous job. By default, thedownload-artifact
action downloads artifacts to the workspace directory that the step is executing in. You can use thepath
input parameter to specify a different download directory. - Reads the value in the
math-homework.txt
file, performs a math calculation, and saves the result tomath-homework.txt
again, overwriting its contents. - Uploads the
math-homework.txt
file. This upload overwrites the previously uploaded artifact because they share the same name.
Job 3 displays the result uploaded in the previous job:
- Downloads the
homework
artifact. - Prints the result of the math equation to the log.
The full math operation performed in this workflow example is (3 + 7) x 9 = 90
.
name: Share data between jobs on: [push] jobs: job_1: name: Add 3 and 7 runs-on: ubuntu-latest steps: - shell: bash run: | expr 3 + 7 > math-homework.txt - name: Upload math result for job 1 uses: actions/upload-artifact@v3 with: name: homework path: math-homework.txt job_2: name: Multiply by 9 needs: job_1 runs-on: windows-latest steps: - name: Download math result for job 1 uses: actions/download-artifact@v3 with: name: homework - shell: bash run: | value=`cat math-homework.txt` expr $value \* 9 > math-homework.txt - name: Upload math result for job 2 uses: actions/upload-artifact@v3 with: name: homework path: math-homework.txt job_3: name: Display results needs: job_2 runs-on: macOS-latest steps: - name: Download math result for job 2 uses: actions/download-artifact@v3 with: name: homework - name: Print the final result shell: bash run: | value=`cat math-homework.txt` echo The result is $value
name: Share data between jobs
on: [push]
jobs:
job_1:
name: Add 3 and 7
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- shell: bash
run: |
expr 3 + 7 > math-homework.txt
- name: Upload math result for job 1
uses: actions/upload-artifact@v3
with:
name: homework
path: math-homework.txt
job_2:
name: Multiply by 9
needs: job_1
runs-on: windows-latest
steps:
- name: Download math result for job 1
uses: actions/download-artifact@v3
with:
name: homework
- shell: bash
run: |
value=`cat math-homework.txt`
expr $value \* 9 > math-homework.txt
- name: Upload math result for job 2
uses: actions/upload-artifact@v3
with:
name: homework
path: math-homework.txt
job_3:
name: Display results
needs: job_2
runs-on: macOS-latest
steps:
- name: Download math result for job 2
uses: actions/download-artifact@v3
with:
name: homework
- name: Print the final result
shell: bash
run: |
value=`cat math-homework.txt`
echo The result is $value
The workflow run will archive any artifacts that it generated. For more information on downloading archived artifacts, see "Downloading workflow artifacts."