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docs/content/actions/guides/building-and-testing-nodejs.md
Matt Pollard 2db9da5c8f [DO NOT MERGE] GitHub AE consumables beta megabranch (#17620)
* Empty commit

* updated beta note for GHAE

* more GHAE update + resolve conflict

* more GHAE updates + prepare for screenshots

* Apply suggestions from code review

Co-authored-by: Shati Patel <42641846+shati-patel@users.noreply.github.com>

* Apply suggestions from code review

Co-authored-by: Shati Patel <42641846+shati-patel@users.noreply.github.com>

* address remaining review comments

* Revise "About GitHub AE" (#17679)

* add screenshots to the Configuring article

* reworked to have a separate GHAE section

* list numbering

* more work on screenshots and conditions

* add GHAE screenshots in article

* review screenshots in article

* added more screenshots and updated more articles

* screenshot madness

* fix liquid versioning

* refactor the ghae script

* [GHAE CB/Feb 22]: Add article about data residency for GitHub AE (#17847)

* add missing GHAE versioning to article

* move screenshots to GHAE asset directory

* forgot to change the path for these two images

* replace CBB screenshot + add better screenshot

* [GHAE CB/Feb 22]: Document upgrades for GitHub AE (#17848)

* Version article for GitHub AE

* Replace unused variable

* Incorporate reviewer feedback

* Update intro

Co-authored-by: Ethan P <56270045+ethanpalm@users.noreply.github.com>

* [GHAE] Enable IP allow list (#17691)

* Notes for CC

* Updat permission leves chart

* Add updated article to further reading

* Update gated feature callout with GitHub AE

* Version "Managing allowed IP addresses for your organization" for AE

* Update images

* Update "Restricting network traffic to your enterprise" with new procedures

* remove todo note

* Update audited actions

* Update info about Premium Runners

* Use reusable for Premium Runners

* Change "Premium Runners" to "AE hosted runners"

* Incorporate reviewer feedback

* Use correct reusable

* Version reusable correctly

* [Feb 22] GHAE: Code scanning beta (#17830)

* Add "github-ae" to all the frontmatter

* GHAE-ify the reusables

* Add some more changes

* Re-use some content

* 🔪 Semmle links

* Revert change re "--external-repository-token" in the CodeQL runner

* Update CodeQL runner token scopes

* Update two screenshots

* Remove mention of GitHub.com from AE + other fixes

* Apply suggestions from code review

Co-authored-by: mc <42146119+mchammer01@users.noreply.github.com>

* Use `product_name` variable instead of `product_location`

* Remove confusing phrase

* [Feb 22] GHAE: Code scanning API and webhook docs (#17883)

* Version API and webhook docs

* Actually add versioning for GHAE

* Fix anchor

* [TEMPORARY] Preview for API endpoints

* Revert API previews

* Update procedure step

Co-authored-by: mc <42146119+mchammer01@users.noreply.github.com>

* Update docs for AzureAD Group SCIM support in GHAE (#17892)

* [GHAE CB] SMTP bootstrapping flow (#17888)

* draft

* update with AE conntent

* update with tons of versioning

* remove that  lie

* fill out the rest of these steps

* update with correct versioning

* more edits

* add images

* reversion most of ae article

* fix versioning

* format correctlly

* words matter

* last image

* update with permmissions

* update versioning

* add link

* apply feedback ❤️

* update with differrent spacing

* update with feedback

* more feedback

* Temporary GHAE release notes for consumables beta launch (#17859)

* Create release-notes.md

* Add frontmatter

* Add to index file

* Update github-ae-release-notes.md

* Add release notes from Google Doc

* Update finalized docs links that have been reviewed

* OAuth device flow link update

* version for AE

* few fixes

* Update content/admin/overview/github-ae-release-notes.md

* small edits

* whoops

* commit

* update with different links

* used wrong reusable

* fix more brokenness

* Update repository-references.js

* Update repository-references.js

Co-authored-by: Meg Bird <megbird@github.com>
Co-authored-by: Kevin Heis <heiskr@users.noreply.github.com>

* [GHAE] Audit public repos (#17917)

* verifying what we mean by public

* Apply suggestions from code review

* Update content/developers/apps/installing-github-apps.md

Co-authored-by: Laura Coursen <lecoursen@github.com>

* fixing placememnt of liquid conditional

Co-authored-by: Laura Coursen <lecoursen@github.com>

* GHAE packages beta (#17786)

Co-authored-by: jmarlena <6732600+jmarlena@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Martin Lopes <martin389@github.com>

* fix broken links

* [GHAE CB/March 01]: GitHub Actions on GHAE (beta) (#17725)

* Added initial layout for premium runners

* Restructured content

* Added placeholder for removing premium runner

* Added versioning and warning note for self-hosted runners

* Added versioning and beta notice for actions content

* Rephrased beta note

* Added versioning for API docs, fixes

* Added versioning fixes

* Split Github-hosted and premium topics into separate articles

* Added edits

* Restructured some topics

* Revised "Using premium runners in a workflow"

* Some small fixes

* Fixed typo

* Added fixes to reusable

* Added edits

* Made section titles consistent

* Added billing, group mgmt, reusable steps

* Cropped certain screenshots for future-proofing

* Removed superfluous reusable

* Added fixes

* Revert "Cropped certain screenshots for future-proofing"

This reverts commit c7f24f31fa30d4fe3de2b63fc3cd5feba44ef518.

* Added new section for custom images

* Added versioning for enterprise-admin operations

* Added edits

* Added edits

* Update adding-premium-runners.md

* Removed SHR screenshots. Intending to update them when UI is available.

* Update using-labels-with-premium-runners.md

* Added custom labels section

* Added preview of API docs changes

* Added versioning for ip allow list section

* Removed removal article

* Renamed premium runners to AE hosted runners

* Re-added added API preview

* Fixed links, updated software specs

* Revised "Software specifications" based on feedback

* Fixed typos

* Small fixes

* Added new article "Creating custom images"

* Moved "Creating custom images" link

* Apply suggestions from code review

Co-authored-by: ahdbilal <55514721+ahdbilal@users.noreply.github.com>

* Added update from review

* Added updates from tech review

* Apply suggestions from code review

Co-authored-by: ahdbilal <55514721+ahdbilal@users.noreply.github.com>

* Added updates from tech review

* Added updates from tech review

* Added updates from tech review

* Added updates from tech review

* Fixed reusable

* Added fixes

* Added update from tech review

* Removed the dereferenced OpenAPI schema files

* Added fixes

* Fixed links

* Fixed links

* Apply suggestions from code review

Co-authored-by: jmarlena <6732600+jmarlena@users.noreply.github.com>

* Added updates from peer review

* Removed sections that are not in beta

* Update viewing-your-github-actions-usage.md

* Update viewing-job-execution-time.md

* Update index.md

* Update about-github-hosted-runners.md

* Restored versioning to match GHES approach

* Fixed link

* Restored self-hosted runner reference to UI steps.

* Updated screenshots

* Updated screenshots and procedures

* Small edits to screenshots

* Added AE url info for SHR

* Removed superfluous versioning

* Update security-hardening-for-github-actions.md

* Update actions-shared.md

* Small edits

* Update usage-limits-billing-and-administration.md

* Update managing-complex-workflows.md

* Additional versioning

* Additional versioning

* version environments api and checkrun deployments for ghae (#17991)

Co-authored-by: Martin Lopes <martin389@github.com>

* Update reviewing-the-audit-log-for-your-organization.md

* Added versioning for enterprise policy settings

* version configuring artifact retention for AE

* remove AE versioning for connecting to Marketplace

* Apply suggestions from code review

Co-authored-by: Joe Bourne <thejoebourneidentity@github.com>

* Update content/admin/github-actions/getting-started-with-github-actions-for-github-ae.md

Co-authored-by: Joe Bourne <thejoebourneidentity@github.com>

* rewording not public to private

* fixing liquid

* Fixed elseif entries

* Added expectations note

* Revised label management article for AE hosted runners

* Added enterprise-admin note for adding AE hosted runners

* Update enterprise-admin.md

* Update self-hosted-runner-security.md

* Versioned reusable for AE

* Empty commit for CI

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Co-authored-by: jmarlena <6732600+jmarlena@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: skedwards88 <skedwards88@github.com>
Co-authored-by: Leona B. Campbell <3880403+runleonarun@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Joe Bourne <thejoebourneidentity@github.com>
Co-authored-by: runleonarun <runleonarun@github.com>

* Update OpenAPI Descriptions for GHAE

* Update content/admin/overview/github-ae-release-notes.md

Co-authored-by: Ethan Palm <56270045+ethanpalm@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: mchammer01 <42146119+mchammer01@users.noreply.github.com>
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Co-authored-by: Sarah Schneider <sarahs@github.com>
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Co-authored-by: Melanie Yarbrough <11952755+myarb@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Felicity Chapman <felicitymay@github.com>
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2021-03-01 16:07:02 -05:00

12 KiB

title, intro, product, redirect_from, versions, type, topics
title intro product redirect_from versions type topics
Building and testing Node.js You can create a continuous integration (CI) workflow to build and test your Node.js project. {% data reusables.gated-features.actions %}
/actions/automating-your-workflow-with-github-actions/using-nodejs-with-github-actions
/actions/language-and-framework-guides/using-nodejs-with-github-actions
free-pro-team enterprise-server github-ae
* >=2.22 *
tutorial
CI
Node
JavaScript

{% data reusables.actions.enterprise-beta %} {% data reusables.actions.enterprise-github-hosted-runners %} {% data reusables.actions.ae-beta %}

Introduction

This guide shows you how to create a continuous integration (CI) workflow that builds and tests Node.js code. If your CI tests pass, you may want to deploy your code or publish a package.

Prerequisites

We recommend that you have a basic understanding of Node.js, YAML, workflow configuration options, and how to create a workflow file. For more information, see:

{% data reusables.actions.enterprise-setup-prereq %}

Starting with the Node.js workflow template

{% data variables.product.prodname_dotcom %} provides a Node.js workflow template that will work for most Node.js projects. This guide includes npm and Yarn examples that you can use to customize the template. For more information, see the Node.js workflow template.

To get started quickly, add the template to the .github/workflows directory of your repository.

{% raw %}

name: Node.js CI

on:
  push:
    branches: [ $default-branch ]
  pull_request:
    branches: [ $default-branch ]

jobs:
  build:

    runs-on: ubuntu-latest

    strategy:
      matrix:
        node-version: [10.x, 12.x, 14.x, 15.x]

    steps:
    - uses: actions/checkout@v2
    - name: Use Node.js ${{ matrix.node-version }}
      uses: actions/setup-node@v1
      with:
        node-version: ${{ matrix.node-version }}
    - run: npm ci
    - run: npm run build --if-present
    - run: npm test

{% endraw %}

{% data reusables.github-actions.example-github-runner %}

Specifying the Node.js version

The easiest way to specify a Node.js version is by using the setup-node action provided by {% data variables.product.prodname_dotcom %}. For more information see, setup-node.

The setup-node action takes a Node.js version as an input and configures that version on the runner. The setup-node action finds a specific version of Node.js from the tools cache on each runner and adds the necessary binaries to PATH, which persists for the rest of the job. Using the setup-node action is the recommended way of using Node.js with {% data variables.product.prodname_actions %} because it ensures consistent behavior across different runners and different versions of Node.js. If you are using a self-hosted runner, you must install Node.js and add it to PATH.

The template includes a matrix strategy that builds and tests your code with four Node.js versions: 10.x, 12.x, 14.x, and 15.x. The 'x' is a wildcard character that matches the latest minor and patch release available for a version. Each version of Node.js specified in the node-version array creates a job that runs the same steps.

Each job can access the value defined in the matrix node-version array using the matrix context. The setup-node action uses the context as the node-version input. The setup-node action configures each job with a different Node.js version before building and testing code. For more information about matrix strategies and contexts, see "Workflow syntax for {% data variables.product.prodname_actions %}" and "Context and expression syntax for {% data variables.product.prodname_actions %}."

{% raw %}

strategy:
  matrix:
    node-version: [10.x, 12.x, 14.x, 15.x]

steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v2
- name: Use Node.js ${{ matrix.node-version }}
  uses: actions/setup-node@v1
  with:
    node-version: ${{ matrix.node-version }}

{% endraw %}

Alternatively, you can build and test with exact Node.js versions.

strategy:
  matrix:
    node-version: [8.16.2, 10.17.0]

Or, you can build and test using a single version of Node.js too.

{% raw %}

name: Node.js CI

on: [push]

jobs:
  build:

    runs-on: ubuntu-latest

    steps:
    - uses: actions/checkout@v2
    - name: Use Node.js
      uses: actions/setup-node@v1
      with:
        node-version: '12.x'
    - run: npm ci
    - run: npm run build --if-present
    - run: npm test

{% endraw %}

If you don't specify a Node.js version, {% data variables.product.prodname_dotcom %} uses the environment's default Node.js version. {% if currentVersion == "github-ae@latest" %} For instructions on how to make sure your {% data variables.actions.hosted_runner %} has the required software installed, see "Creating custom images." {% else %} For more information, see "Specifications for {% data variables.product.prodname_dotcom %}-hosted runners". {% endif %}

Installing dependencies

{% data variables.product.prodname_dotcom %}-hosted runners have npm and Yarn dependency managers installed. You can use npm and Yarn to install dependencies in your workflow before building and testing your code. The Windows and Linux {% data variables.product.prodname_dotcom %}-hosted runners also have Grunt, Gulp, and Bower installed.

When using {% data variables.product.prodname_dotcom %}-hosted runners, you can also cache dependencies to speed up your workflow. For more information, see "Caching dependencies to speed up workflows."

Example using npm

This example installs the dependencies defined in the package.json file. For more information, see npm install.

steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v2
- name: Use Node.js
  uses: actions/setup-node@v1
  with:
    node-version: '12.x'
- name: Install dependencies
  run: npm install

Using npm ci installs the versions in the package-lock.json or npm-shrinkwrap.json file and prevents updates to the lock file. Using npm ci is generally faster than running npm install. For more information, see npm ci and "Introducing npm ci for faster, more reliable builds."

{% raw %}

steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v2
- name: Use Node.js
  uses: actions/setup-node@v1
  with:
    node-version: '12.x'
- name: Install dependencies
  run: npm ci

{% endraw %}

Example using Yarn

This example installs the dependencies defined in the package.json file. For more information, see yarn install.

steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v2
- name: Use Node.js
  uses: actions/setup-node@v1
  with:
    node-version: '12.x'
- name: Install dependencies
  run: yarn

Alternatively, you can pass --frozen-lockfile to install the versions in the yarn.lock file and prevent updates to the yarn.lock file.

steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v2
- name: Use Node.js
  uses: actions/setup-node@v1
  with:
    node-version: '12.x'
- name: Install dependencies
  run: yarn --frozen-lockfile

Example using a private registry and creating the .npmrc file

{% data reusables.github-actions.setup-node-intro %}

To authenticate to your private registry, you'll need to store your npm authentication token as a secret. For example, create a repository secret called NPM_TOKEN. For more information, see "Creating and using encrypted secrets."

In the example below, the secret NPM_TOKEN stores the npm authentication token. The setup-node action configures the .npmrc file to read the npm authentication token from the NODE_AUTH_TOKEN environment variable. When using the setup-node action to create an .npmrc file, you must set the NODE_AUTH_TOKEN environment variable with the secret that contains your npm authentication token.

Before installing dependencies, use the setup-node action to create the .npmrc file. The action has two input parameters. The node-version parameter sets the Node.js version, and the registry-url parameter sets the default registry. If your package registry uses scopes, you must use the scope parameter. For more information, see npm-scope.

{% raw %}

steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v2
- name: Use Node.js
  uses: actions/setup-node@v1
  with:
    always-auth: true
    node-version: '12.x'
    registry-url: https://registry.npmjs.org
    scope: '@octocat'
- name: Install dependencies
  run: npm ci
  env:
    NODE_AUTH_TOKEN: ${{secrets.NPM_TOKEN}}

{% endraw %}

The example above creates an .npmrc file with the following contents:

//registry.npmjs.org/:_authToken=${NODE_AUTH_TOKEN}
@octocat:registry=https://registry.npmjs.org/
always-auth=true

Example caching dependencies

When using {% data variables.product.prodname_dotcom %}-hosted runners, you can cache dependencies using a unique key, and restore the dependencies when you run future workflows using the cache action. For more information, see "Caching dependencies to speed up workflows" and the cache action.

{% raw %}

steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v2
- name: Use Node.js
  uses: actions/setup-node@v1
  with:
    node-version: '12.x'
- name: Cache Node.js modules
  uses: actions/cache@v2
  with:
    # npm cache files are stored in `~/.npm` on Linux/macOS
    path: ~/.npm
    key: ${{ runner.OS }}-node-${{ hashFiles('**/package-lock.json') }}
    restore-keys: |
      ${{ runner.OS }}-node-
      ${{ runner.OS }}-
- name: Install dependencies
  run: npm ci

{% endraw %}

Building and testing your code

You can use the same commands that you use locally to build and test your code. For example, if you run npm run build to run build steps defined in your package.json file and npm test to run your test suite, you would add those commands in your workflow file.

steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v2
- name: Use Node.js
  uses: actions/setup-node@v1
  with:
    node-version: '12.x'
- run: npm install
- run: npm run build --if-present
- run: npm test

Packaging workflow data as artifacts

You can save artifacts from your build and test steps to view after a job completes. For example, you may need to save log files, core dumps, test results, or screenshots. For more information, see "Persisting workflow data using artifacts."

Publishing to package registries

You can configure your workflow to publish your Node.js package to a package registry after your CI tests pass. For more information about publishing to npm and {% data variables.product.prodname_registry %}, see "Publishing Node.js packages."