A hydrated Octokit client.
Returns an authenticated Octokit client that follows the machine proxy settings and correctly sets GHES base urls. See https://octokit.github.io/rest.js for the API.
const github = require('@actions/github');
const core = require('@actions/core');
async function run() {
// This should be a token with access to your repository scoped in as a secret.
// The YML workflow will need to set myToken with the GitHub Secret Token
// myToken: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
// https://help.github.com/en/actions/automating-your-workflow-with-github-actions/authenticating-with-the-github_token#about-the-github_token-secret
const myToken = core.getInput('myToken');
const octokit = github.getOctokit(myToken)
// You can also pass in additional options as a second parameter to getOctokit
// const octokit = github.getOctokit(myToken, {userAgent: "MyActionVersion1"});
const { data: pullRequest } = await octokit.pulls.get({
owner: 'octokit',
repo: 'rest.js',
pull_number: 123,
mediaType: {
format: 'diff'
}
});
console.log(pullRequest);
}
run();
You can also make GraphQL requests. See https://github.com/octokit/graphql.js for the API.
const result = await octokit.graphql(query, variables);
Finally, you can get the context of the current action:
const github = require('@actions/github');
const context = github.context;
const newIssue = await octokit.issues.create({
...context.repo,
title: 'New issue!',
body: 'Hello Universe!'
});
The npm module @octokit/webhooks
provides type definitions for the response payloads. You can cast the payload to these types for better type information.
First, install the npm module npm install @octokit/webhooks
Then, assert the type based on the eventName
import * as core from '@actions/core'
import * as github from '@actions/github'
import * as Webhooks from '@octokit/webhooks'
if (github.context.eventName === 'push') {
const pushPayload = github.context.payload as Webhooks.WebhookPayloadPush
core.info(`The head commit is: ${pushPayload.head}`)
}
@octokit/core
now supports the plugin architecture. You can extend the GitHub instance using plugins.
For example, using the @octokit/plugin-enterprise-server
you can now access enterprise admin apis on GHES instances.
import { GitHub, getOctokitOptions } from '@actions/github/lib/utils'
import { enterpriseServer220Admin } from '@octokit/plugin-enterprise-server'
const octokit = GitHub.plugin(enterpriseServer220Admin)
// or override some of the default values as well
// const octokit = GitHub.plugin(enterpriseServer220Admin).defaults({userAgent: "MyNewUserAgent"})
const myToken = core.getInput('myToken');
const myOctokit = new octokit(getOctokitOptions(token))
// Create a new user
myOctokit.enterpriseAdmin.createUser({
login: "testuser",
email: "testuser@test.com",
});