Node.js: Configure the GitHub Actions workflow
This documentation is part of the Deploy with GitHub Actions guide. You can view the complete guide here: Learn how to deploy your Node.js code using GitHub Actions.
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Inside your Git repository, create a .github/workflows directory if it does not already exist. Then add a file named deploy-to-stackhero.yml:
# File: .github/workflows/deploy-to-stackhero.yml
name: Deploy to Stackhero
run-name: Deploy branch "${{ github.ref_name }}" to Stackhero
on:
push:
# List the branches that trigger the deployment action. Make sure there is an environment in GitHub (under "Settings" > "Environments") for each branch.
# Then add the corresponding secret STACKHERO_SSH_PRIVATE_KEY and variable STACKHERO_ENDPOINT in that environment.
branches: [ "production", "staging" ]
jobs:
Deploy:
environment: ${{ github.ref_name }}
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- uses: stackhero-io/github-actions-deploy-to-stackhero@v1
with:
# STACKHERO_SSH_PRIVATE_KEY and STACKHERO_ENDPOINT should be set in the respective GitHub environment.
ssh_private_key: ${{ secrets.STACKHERO_SSH_PRIVATE_KEY }}
endpoint: ${{ vars.STACKHERO_ENDPOINT }}
Once you have created the workflow file, you can commit your changes as follows:
git add -A .
git commit -m "Add GitHub Actions to deploy to Stackhero"
To create a production branch, run:
git checkout -b production
Then push your changes to GitHub:
git push --set-upstream origin production
This push sends your code to the production branch and triggers GitHub Actions to deploy your code to the Stackhero service. To check the deployment, open your project on GitHub and click on Actions.
GitHub Actions that deployed to production
That's it. Your code is now ready for automatic deployment to production via GitHub Actions.