GitHub Actions gives you the flexibility to build an automated software development lifecycle workflow.
You can automate your workflows to deploy to Azure Container Instances using GitHub Actions.
Get started today with a free Azure account!
This repository contains GitHub Action for Deploying to Azure Container Instances to deploy to Azure Container Instances. It supports deploying your container image to an Azure Container Instance.
Note: Currently this action supports deploying to azure container instances only if the ip-Address of the container group is public.
The definition of this GitHub Action is in action.yml.
- Azure Login Login with your Azure Credentials for Authentication. Once login is done, the next set of Azure Actions in the workflow can re-use the same session within the job.
For using any credentials like Azure Service Principal in your workflow, add them as secrets in the GitHub Repository and then refer them in the workflow.
- Download Azure CLI from here, run
az login
to login with your Azure Credentials. - Run Azure CLI command to create an Azure Service Principal for RBAC:
az ad sp create-for-rbac --name "myApp" --role contributor \
--scopes /subscriptions/{subscription-id}/resourceGroups/{resource-group} \
--sdk-auth
# Replace {subscription-id}, {resource-group} with the subscription, resource group details of the WebApp
# The command should output a JSON object similar to this:
{
"clientId": "<GUID>",
"clientSecret": "<GUID>",
"subscriptionId": "<GUID>",
"tenantId": "<GUID>",
(...)
}
- You can further scope down the Azure Credentials to the Web App using scope attribute. For example,
az ad sp create-for-rbac --name "myApp" --role contributor \
--scopes /subscriptions/{subscription-id}/resourceGroups/{resource-group}/providers/Microsoft.Web/sites/{app-name} \
--sdk-auth
# Replace {subscription-id}, {resource-group}, and {app-name} with the names of your subscription, resource group, and Azure Web App.
- Paste the json response from above Azure CLI to your GitHub Repository > Settings > Secrets > Add a new secret > AZURE_CREDENTIALS
- Now in the workflow file in your branch:
.github/workflows/workflow.yml
replace the secret in Azure login action with your secret (Refer to the example below)
on: [push]
name: Linux_Container_Workflow
jobs:
build-and-deploy:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
# checkout the repo
- name: 'Checkout GitHub Action'
uses: actions/checkout@master
- name: 'Login via Azure CLI'
uses: azure/login@v1
with:
creds: ${{ secrets.AZURE_CREDENTIALS }}
- uses: azure/docker-login@v1
with:
login-server: contoso.azurecr.io
username: ${{ secrets.REGISTRY_USERNAME }}
password: ${{ secrets.REGISTRY_PASSWORD }}
- run: |
docker build . -t contoso.azurecr.io/nodejssampleapp:${{ github.sha }}
docker push contoso.azurecr.io/nodejssampleapp:${{ github.sha }}
- name: 'Deploy to Azure Container Instances'
uses: 'azure/aci-deploy@v1'
with:
resource-group: contoso
dns-name-label: url-for-container
image: contoso.azurecr.io/nodejssampleapp:${{ github.sha }}
registry-username: ${{ secrets.REGISTRY_USERNAME }}
registry-password: ${{ secrets.REGISTRY_PASSWORD }}
name: contoso-container
location: 'west us'
- uses: Azure/aci-deploy@v1
with:
resource-group: contoso
dns-name-label: url-for-container
image: nginx
name: contoso-container
location: 'east us'
- uses: Azure/aci-deploy@v1
with:
resource-group: contoso
dns-name-label: url-for-container
image: nginx
name: contoso-container
azure-file-volume-share-name: shareName
azure-file-volume-account-name: accountName
azure-file-volume-account-key: ${{ secrets.AZURE_FILE_VOLUME_KEY }}
azure-file-volume-mount-path: /mnt/volume1
location: 'east us'
NOTE: The values of secure-environment-variables
will not be shown in the properties of the Azure Container Instance, but will be shown in the logs of the GitHub Action unless you specify them as Secrets.
Your environment variable names must start with a alphabetic character or _
.
- uses: Azure/aci-deploy@v1
with:
resource-group: contoso
dns-name-label: url-for-container
image: nginx
name: contoso-container
command-line: /bin/bash a.sh
environment-variables: key1=value1 key2=value2
secure-environment-variables: key1=${{ secrets.ENV_VAL1 }} key2=${{ secrets.ENV_VAL2 }}
location: 'east us'
If you wish to develop and test changes against a local fork or development repo, you can do so by including the node_modules
in tagged release branch. Note that the aci-deploy
repository does not include these modules in the master branch, so you cannot point your action to aci-deploy/master
to pick up recent commits.
Testing can be performed against your local repo by performing the following:
- Fork this repo.
- Create a separate branch on your local copy. This will be used to execute the action from your workflow.
- Perform an
npm install
andnpm run build
- Ensure that you check in the
node_modules
directory to your branch. - Update your workflow to refer to your tagged release from forked copy.
This project welcomes contributions and suggestions. Most contributions require you to agree to a Contributor License Agreement (CLA) declaring that you have the right to, and actually do, grant us the rights to use your contribution. For details, visit https://cla.opensource.microsoft.com.
When you submit a pull request, a CLA bot will automatically determine whether you need to provide a CLA and decorate the PR appropriately (e.g., status check, comment). Simply follow the instructions provided by the bot. You will only need to do this once across all repos using our CLA.
This project has adopted the Microsoft Open Source Code of Conduct. For more information see the Code of Conduct FAQ or contact opencode@microsoft.com with any additional questions or comments.