This Action for firebase-tools enables arbitrary actions with the firebase
command-line client.
If you want a more flexible implementation, an early version of a rewrite is available here: setup-firebase that allows you to choose node and java version and run more than one command.
args
- Required. This is the arguments you want to use for thefirebase
cli
* response
- The full response from the firebase command current run (Will most likely require a grep to get what you want, like URLS)
Response has been removed for now as it caused loads of issues in the bash script
-
GCP_SA_KEY
- Required if FIREBASE_TOKEN is not set. A normal service account key (json format) or a base64 encoded service account key with the needed permissions for what you are trying to deploy/update.- Since the service account is using the App Engine default service account in the deploy process, it also needs the
Service Account User
role. - If deploying functions, you would also need the
Cloud Functions Developer
role.- If the deploy has scheduled functions, include the
Cloud Scheduler Admin
role. - If the deploy requires access to secrets, include the
Secret Manager Viewer
role. - If updating Firestore Rules, include the
Firebase Rules Admin
role.
- If the deploy has scheduled functions, include the
- If updating Firestore Indexes, include the
Cloud Datastore Index Admin
role. - If deplying Hosting files, include the
Firebase Hosting Admin
role. - For more details: https://firebase.google.com/docs/hosting/github-integration
- Since the service account is using the App Engine default service account in the deploy process, it also needs the
-
FIREBASE_TOKEN
- Required if GCP_SA_KEY is not set. This method will soon be deprecated, useGCP_SA_KEY
instead. The token to use for authentication. This token can be aquired through thefirebase login:ci
command. -
PROJECT_ID
- Optional. To specify a specific project to use for all commands. Not required if you specify a project in your.firebaserc
file. If you use this, you need to giveViewer
permission roles to your service account otherwise the action will fail with authentication errors. -
PROJECT_PATH
- Optional. The path to the folder containingfirebase.json
if it doesn't exist at the root of your repository. e.g../my-app
. -
CONFIG_VALUES
- Optional. The configuration values for Firebase function that would normally be set withfirebase functions:config:set [value]
. Example:CONFIG_VALUES: stripe.secret_key=SECRET_KEY zapier.secret_key=SECRET_KEY
.
To authenticate with Firebase, and deploy to Firebase Hosting:
name: Build and Deploy
on:
push:
branches:
- master
jobs:
build:
name: Build
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- name: Checkout Repo
uses: actions/checkout@master
- name: Install Dependencies
run: npm install
- name: Build
run: npm run build-prod
- name: Archive Production Artifact
uses: actions/upload-artifact@master
with:
name: dist
path: dist
deploy:
name: Deploy
needs: build
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- name: Checkout Repo
uses: actions/checkout@master
- name: Download Artifact
uses: actions/download-artifact@master
with:
name: dist
path: dist
- name: Deploy to Firebase
uses: w9jds/firebase-action@master
with:
args: deploy --only hosting
env:
FIREBASE_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.FIREBASE_TOKEN }}
Alternatively:
env:
GCP_SA_KEY: ${{ secrets.GCP_SA_KEY }}
If you have multiple hosting environments you can specify which one in the args line.
e.g. args: deploy --only hosting:[environment name]
If you want to add a message to a deployment (e.g. the Git commit message) you need to take extra care and escape the quotes or the YAML breaks.
with:
args: deploy --message \"${{ github.event.head_commit.message }}\"
Starting with version v2.1.2 each version release will point to a versioned docker image allowing for hardening our pipeline (so things don't break when I do something dump). On top of this, you can also point to a master
version if you would like to test out what might not be deployed into a release yet by using something like this:
name: Deploy to Firebase
uses: docker://w9jds/firebase-action:master
with:
args: deploy --only hosting
env:
FIREBASE_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.FIREBASE_TOKEN }}
The Dockerfile and associated scripts and documentation in this project are released under the MIT License.
If you decide to do seperate jobs for build and deployment (which is probably advisable), then make sure to clone your repo as the Firebase-cli requires the firebase repo to deploy (specifically the firebase.json
)