Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
112 lines (87 loc) · 4.46 KB

README.md

File metadata and controls

112 lines (87 loc) · 4.46 KB

Repository Dispatch

CI GitHub Marketplace

A GitHub action to create a repository dispatch event.

Usage

      - name: Repository Dispatch
        uses: peter-evans/repository-dispatch@v1
        with:
          token: ${{ secrets.REPO_ACCESS_TOKEN }}
          event-type: my-event

Action inputs

Name Description Default
token (required) A repo scoped GitHub Personal Access Token. See token for further details.
repository The full name of the repository to send the dispatch. github.repository (current repository)
event-type (required) A custom webhook event name.
client-payload JSON payload with extra information about the webhook event that your action or workflow may use. {}

token

This action creates repository_dispatch events. The default GITHUB_TOKEN does not have scopes to do this so a repo scoped PAT is required. If you will be dispatching to a public repository then you can use the more limited public_repo scope.

Example

Here is an example setting all of the input parameters.

      - name: Repository Dispatch
        uses: peter-evans/repository-dispatch@v1
        with:
          token: ${{ secrets.REPO_ACCESS_TOKEN }}
          repository: username/my-repo
          event-type: my-event
          client-payload: '{"ref": "${{ github.ref }}", "sha": "${{ github.sha }}"}'

Here is an example on: repository_dispatch workflow to receive the event. Note that repository dispatch events will only trigger a workflow run if the workflow is committed to the default branch (usually master).

name: Repository Dispatch
on:
  repository_dispatch:
    types: [my-event]
jobs:
  myEvent:
    runs-on: ubuntu-latest
    steps:
      - uses: actions/checkout@v2
        with:
          ref: ${{ github.event.client_payload.ref }}
      - run: echo ${{ github.event.client_payload.sha }}

Dispatch to multiple repositories

You can dispatch to multiple repositories by using a matrix strategy. In the following example, after the build job succeeds, an event is dispatched to three different repositories.

jobs:
  build:
    # Main workflow job that builds, tests, etc.

  dispatch:
    needs: build
    strategy:
      matrix:
        repo: ['my-org/repo1', 'my-org/repo2', 'my-org/repo3']
    runs-on: ubuntu-latest
    steps:
      - name: Repository Dispatch
        uses: peter-evans/repository-dispatch@v1
        with:
          token: ${{ secrets.REPO_ACCESS_TOKEN }}
          repository: ${{ matrix.repo }}
          event-type: my-event

Client payload

The GitHub API allows a maximum of 10 top-level properties in the client-payload JSON. If you use more than that you will see an error message like the following.

No more than 10 properties are allowed; 14 were supplied.

For example, this payload will fail because it has more than 10 top-level properties.

client-payload: ${{ toJson(github) }}

To solve this you can simply wrap the payload in a single top-level property. The following payload will succeed.

client-payload: '{"github": ${{ toJson(github) }}}'

License

MIT