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convictional/trigger-workflow-and-wait

Use this GitHub action with your project
Add this Action to an existing workflow or create a new one
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Trigger Workflow and Wait

Github Action for trigger a workflow from another workflow. The action then waits for a response.

When would you use it?

When deploying an app you may need to deploy additional services, this Github Action helps with that.

Arguments

Argument Name Required Default Description
owner True N/A The owner of the repository where the workflow is contained.
repo True N/A The repository where the workflow is contained.
github_token True N/A The Github access token with access to the repository. Its recommended you put it under secrets.
workflow_file_name True N/A The reference point. For example, you could use main.yml.
github_user False N/A The name of the github user whose access token is being used to trigger the workflow.
ref False main The reference of the workflow run. The reference can be a branch, tag, or a commit SHA.
wait_interval False 10 The number of seconds delay between checking for result of run.
client_payload False {} Payload to pass to the workflow, must be a JSON string
propagate_failure False true Fail current job if downstream job fails.
trigger_workflow False true Trigger the specified workflow.
wait_workflow False true Wait for workflow to finish.
comment_downstream_url False `` A comments API URL to comment the current downstream job URL to. Default: no comment
comment_github_token False ${{github.token}} token used for pull_request comments

Example

Simple

- uses: convictional/trigger-workflow-and-wait@v1.6.1
  with:
    owner: keithconvictional
    repo: myrepo
    github_token: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_PERSONAL_ACCESS_TOKEN }}

All Options

- uses: convictional/trigger-workflow-and-wait@v1.6.1
  with:
    owner: keithconvictional
    repo: myrepo
    github_token: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_PERSONAL_ACCESS_TOKEN }}
    github_user: github-user
    workflow_file_name: main.yml
    ref: release-branch
    wait_interval: 10
    client_payload: '{}'
    propagate_failure: false
    trigger_workflow: true
    wait_workflow: true

Comment the current running workflow URL for a PR

- uses: convictional/trigger-workflow-and-wait@v1.6.1
  with:
    owner: keithconvictional
    repo: myrepo
    github_token: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_PERSONAL_ACCESS_TOKEN }}
    comment_downstream_url: ${{ github.event.pull_request.comments_url }}

Testing

You can test out the action locally by cloning the repository to your computer. You can run:

INPUT_OWNER="keithconvictional" \
INPUT_REPO="myrepo" \
INPUT_GITHUB_TOKEN="<REDACTED>" \
INPUT_GITHUB_USER="github-user" \
INPUT_WORKFLOW_FILE_NAME="main.yml" \
INPUT_REF="release-branch" \
INPUT_WAIT_INTERVAL=10 \
INPUT_CLIENT_PAYLOAD='{}' \
INPUT_PROPAGATE_FAILURE=false \
INPUT_TRIGGER_WORKFLOW=true \
INPUT_WAIT_WORKFLOW=true \
busybox sh entrypoint.sh

You will have to create a Github Personal access token. You can create a test workflow to be executed. In a repository, add a new main.yml to .github/workflows/. The workflow will be:

name: Main
on:
  workflow_dispatch
jobs:
  build:
    runs-on: ubuntu-latest
    steps:
      - uses: actions/checkout@master
      - name: Pause for 25 seconds
        run: |
          sleep 25

You can see the example here. For testing a failure case, just add this line after the sleep:

...
- name: Pause for 25 seconds
  run: |
    sleep 25
    echo "For testing failure"
    exit 1

Potential Issues

Changes

If you do not want the latest build all of the time, please use a versioned copy of the Github Action. You specify the version after the @ sign.

- uses: convictional/trigger-workflow-and-wait@v1.6.1
  with:
    owner: keithconvictional
    repo: myrepo
    github_token: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_PERSONAL_ACCESS_TOKEN }}