Workflow file for this run
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# The name of the Github Action that displays in github.com/<username>/<repo>/actions | |
name: Deploy to WordPress.org Repository | |
# Here we can define the events "on" which the action should be triggered. | |
on: | |
# Since we want to publish new versions of our plugin, we only want this action to | |
# run when publishing a new release. | |
# | |
# The released version of the plugin will then be deployed to the repository. | |
# | |
# This allows us to run and manage plugin releases from a single location. | |
release: | |
# run only when a new release is published, but not when it's classified as a pre-release. | |
types: [ released ] | |
# A list of jobs involved in this workflow. | |
jobs: | |
# A unique job identifier. | |
# | |
# Github Actions can have multiple jobs and each can be referenced by its name. | |
# However, we only need to run a few steps here and they can be handled in a single job. | |
deploy_to_wp_repository: | |
# The proper name for the job being run. | |
name: Deploy to WP.org | |
# The environment this job should run on. In the context of WordPress, ubuntu-latest is | |
# pretty typical. Since we are only interacting with git and subversion, Ubuntu is perfect | |
# for this. | |
# | |
# Github does offer other platforms if you need them: https://docs.github.com/en/actions/using-workflows/workflow-syntax-for-github-actions#jobsjob_idruns-on | |
runs-on: ubuntu-latest | |
# Every job has a specific set of steps that it goes through to do its "work". | |
# | |
# Each step has a two key elements: | |
# • Name | |
# • a "run" command (an arbitrary CLI command to execute) OR a "uses" command that pulls in and executes a 3rd party action. | |
steps: | |
# Most workflows begin by checking out the repository into the workflow filesystem. | |
# | |
# This is just like cloning a repository except it only checks out the specific commit | |
# the job is executed for. In our case here, the commit that the release is attached to. | |
- name: Checkout code | |
uses: actions/checkout@v4 | |
- name: Configure Composer token | |
run: composer config -g github-oauth.github.com ${{ secrets.COMPOSER_TOKEN }} | |
- name: Build | |
run: | | |
composer install --no-dev --no-scripts | |
composer run strauss-release | |
npm install --legacy-peer-deps | |
npm run build | |
- name: WordPress Plugin Deploy | |
# You can add unique ids to specific steps if you want to reference their output later in the workflow. | |
# | |
# Here, this unique identifier lets us use the output from the action to get the zip-path later. | |
id: deploy | |
# The use statement lets us pull in the work done by 10up to deploy the plugin to the WordPress repository. | |
uses: 10up/action-wordpress-plugin-deploy@stable | |
# Steps can also provide arguments, so this configures 10up's action to also generate a zip file. | |
with: | |
generate-zip: true | |
# Steps can also set environment variables which can be configured in the Github settings for the | |
# repository. Here, we are using action secrets SVN_USERNAME, SVN_PASSWORD, and PLUGIN_SLUG which | |
# authenticate with WordPress and lets the action deploy our plugin to the repository. | |
# | |
# To learn more about setting and using secrets with Github Actions, check out: https://docs.github.com/en/actions/security-guides/encrypted-secrets?tool=webui#about-encrypted-secrets | |
env: | |
SVN_USERNAME: ${{ secrets.SVN_USERNAME }} | |
SVN_PASSWORD: ${{ secrets.SVN_PASSWORD }} | |
# After the deploy, we also want to create a zip and upload it to the release on Github. We don't want | |
# users to have to go to the repository to find our plugin :). | |
- name: Upload release asset | |
uses: actions/upload-release-asset@v1 | |
env: | |
# Note, this is an exception to action secrets: GH_TOKEN is always available and provides access to | |
# the current repository this action runs in. | |
GITHUB_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }} | |
with: | |
# Get the URL for uploading assets to the current release. | |
upload_url: ${{ github.event.release.upload_url }} | |
# Provide the path to the file generated in the previous step using the output. | |
asset_path: ${{ steps.deploy.outputs.zip-path }} | |
# Provide what the file should be named when attached to the release (plugin-name.zip) | |
asset_name: ${{ github.event.repository.name }}.zip | |
# Provide the file type. | |
asset_content_type: application/zip | |
- name: Send Slack notification | |
uses: slackapi/[email protected] | |
with: | |
# For posting a rich message using Block Kit | |
payload: | | |
{ | |
"text": "<!subteam^S07ESK6U6EN|kadencewp-team> 🚀 ${{ github.event.repository.name }} version ${{ github.event.release.tag_name }} has been released!\n\nView on GitHub: ${{ github.event.release.html_url }}" | |
} | |
env: | |
SLACK_WEBHOOK_URL: ${{ secrets.SLACK_WEBHOOK_URL }} | |
SLACK_WEBHOOK_TYPE: INCOMING_WEBHOOK |