You can use this GitHub Action to commit changes made in your workflow run directly to your repo: for example, you use it to lint your code, update documentation, commit updated builds and so on...
This is heavily inspired by git-auto-commit-action (by Stefan Zweifel): that action automatically detects changed files and commits them. While this is useful for most situations, this doesn't commit untracked files and can sometimes commit unintended changes (such as package-lock.json or similar, that may have happened during previous steps).
This action lets you choose the path that you want to use when adding & committing changes, so that it works as you would normally do using git on your machine.
Usage
Add a step like this to your workflow:
- uses: EndBug/add-and-commit@v2 # You can change this to use a specific version with: # The name of the user that will be displayed as the author of the commit # Default: author of the commit that triggered the run author_name: Your Name # The The email of the user that will be displayed as the author of the commit # Default: author of the commit that triggered the run author_email: mail@example.com # The local path to the directory where your repository is located. You should use actions/checkout first to set it up # Default: '.' cwd: './path/to/the/repo' # The message for the commit # Default: 'Commit from GitHub Actions' message: 'Your commit message' # The path to stage files from # Default: '.' path: 'src' # The pattern that mathces file names # Default: '*.*' pattern: "*.js" # Whether to use the --force option on git add, in order to bypass eventual gitignores # Default: false force: true # The arguments to use with the find command in the action script # Default: '' find_args: '-not -path "./idk/*"' env: # This is necessary in order to push a commit to the repo GITHUB_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }} # Leave this line unchanged
Environment variables:
The only env variable required is the token for the action to run: GitHub generates one automatically, but you need to pass it through env to make it available to actions. You can find more about GITHUB_TOKEN here.
With that said, you can just copy the example line and don't worry about it. If you do want to use a different token you can pass that in, but I wouldn't see any possible advantage in doing so.
Deleting files:
This action only adds files so in order to commit a file deletion you need to stage that separately: for that, you can run git rm in a previous step. Here's a quick example:
- run: git rm delete_me.txt - uses: EndBug/add-and-commit@v2 with: author_name: Your Name author_email: mail@example.com message: "Remove file" path: "." pattern: "*.js" # The path is not important, the file will get removed anyway: that means you can still use the action as usual force: true env: GITHUB_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
Examples:
Do you want to lint your JavaScript files, located in the src folder, with ESLint, so that fixable changes are done without your intervention? You can use a workflow like this:
name: Lint source code on: push jobs: run: name: Lint with ESLint runs-on: ubuntu-latest steps: - name: Checkout repo uses: actions/checkout@v2 - name: Set up Node.js uses: actions/setup-node@v1 with: node-version: 12.x - name: Install dependencies run: npm install - name: Update source code run: eslint "src/**" --fix - name: Commit changes uses: EndBug/add-and-commit@v2 with: author_name: Your Name author_email: mail@example.com message: "Your commit message" path: "." pattern: "*.js" env: GITHUB_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
If you need to run the action on a repository that is not located in $GITHUB_WORKSPACE, you can use the cwd option: the action uses a cd normal command, so the path should follow bash standards.
name: Use a different repository directory on: push jobs: run: name: Add a text file runs-on: ubuntu-latest steps: # If you need to, you can checkout your repo to a different location - uses: actions/checkout@v2 with: path: "./pathToRepo/" # You can make whatever type of change to the repo... - run: echo "123" > ./pathToRepo/file.txt # ...and then use the action as you would normally do, but providing the path to the repo - uses: EndBug/add-and-commit@v2 with: message: "Add the very useful text file" path: "." pattern: "*.txt" cwd: "./pathToRepo/" force: true env: GITHUB_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
License
This action is distributed under the MIT license, check the license for more info.