cache
typescript-action
Our great sponsors
cache | typescript-action | |
---|---|---|
40 | 29 | |
4,250 | 1,769 | |
2.4% | 3.4% | |
7.4 | 9.2 | |
12 days ago | 5 days ago | |
TypeScript | TypeScript | |
MIT License | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
cache
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GitHub Actions could be so much better
> with no persistent storage
There's https://github.com/actions/cache though?
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Optimizing GitHub Actions Performance: Enhance Workflows with Caching
Use Cache Actions: GitHub Actions provides cache actions that simplify caching implementation. The @actions/cache JavaScript library is a popular choice for managing caching in workflows. It offers flexible options for storing and retrieving cache artifacts based on keys, scopes, and paths.
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Speeding up GitHub Actions with npm cache
GitHub maintain a set of repos called actions. One of which is called cache.
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How I Sliced Deployment Times to a Fraction and Achieved Lightning-Fast Deployments with GitHub Actions
By utilizing the actions/cache action action, we implemented a strategy to store and retrieve dependencies, preventing redundant installations.
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Use GitHub Actions to Make Your GitHub Profile Dynamic
I do think it's good practice to enable caching, such that your script doesn't hit RubyGems / pip / npm / etc every time it runs.
That way at least the automation activity stays entirely within the GitHub / Azure network.
It looks like you can do that for Ruby by adding this:
https://github.com/actions/cache/blob/master/examples.md#rub...
- uses: ruby/setup-ruby@v1
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A guide to using act with GitHub Actions
β getting-started-with-act git:(master) act -j build WARN β You are using Apple M1 chip and you have not specified container architecture, you might encounter issues while running act. If so, try running it with '--container-architecture linux/amd64'. β [Node.js CI/build] π Start image=node:16-buster-slim [Node.js CI/build] π³ docker pull image=node:16-buster-slim platform= username= forcePull=false [Node.js CI/build] π³ docker create image=node:16-buster-slim platform= entrypoint=["tail" "-f" "/dev/null"] cmd=[] [Node.js CI/build] π³ docker run image=node:16-buster-slim platform= entrypoint=["tail" "-f" "/dev/null"] cmd=[] [Node.js CI/build] β git clone 'https://github.com/actions/setup-node' # ref=v3 [Node.js CI/build] β git clone 'https://github.com/actions/cache' # ref=v3 [Node.js CI/build] β git clone 'https://github.com/actions/upload-artifact' # ref=v3 [Node.js CI/build] β Run Main actions/checkout@v3 [Node.js CI/build] π³ docker cp src=/Users/andrewevans/Documents/projects/getting-started-with-act/. dst=/Users/andrewevans/Documents/projects/getting-started-with-act [Node.js CI/build] β Success - Main actions/checkout@v3 [Node.js CI/build] β Run Main Use Node.js 16.x [Node.js CI/build] π³ docker cp src=/Users/andrewevans/.cache/act/actions-setup-node@v3/ dst=/var/run/act/actions/actions-setup-node@v3/ [Node.js CI/build] π³ docker exec cmd=[node /var/run/act/actions/actions-setup-node@v3/dist/setup/index.js] user= workdir= [Node.js CI/build] π¬ ::debug::isExplicit: [Node.js CI/build] π¬ ::debug::explicit? false
- duplicated cache by cache action
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runner image with MS office installed - do-able? is there a better way?
You could try to find some point in the process where you can set up Actions caches with actions/cache, otherwise Container customization for Self-Hosted Runners is currently in Beta.
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[Question] Decrease Docker image's build time
I would configure Github Actions cache so Docker doesn't have to compile all layers from scratch every time
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The strongest principle of the blog's growth lies in the human choice to deploy it
In the copied example, npm caching is done via actions/cache@v2 action. But we can simplify our workflow by dropping this step and using built-in functionality for caching
typescript-action
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Hashnode Blog GitHub Action - fetch and display the latest blogs in a nice format
While learning about GitHub Actions, I came across the GitHub Actions Org, and they have a bunch of templates for building custom GitHub actions. So, I started searching for a template that has TypeScript support, ensuring type safety to write bug-free code. I found the typescript-action template that includes support for tests, linter, versioning, and more.
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Dynamically importing a downloaded file in a TypeScript GitHub action.
This is the template I used for my TypeScript action https://github.com/actions/typescript-action
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Develop, test, and deploy your extensions for all popular CIs from a single codebase
I found the GitHub actions documentation easier to read than Azure, so I would recommend starting writing and testing your extensions on GitHub by using the official template actions/typescript-action. The mentioned template provides a good starting point; I won't repeat the steps here. Play with it, write some simple stuff, and then return here for the next steps.
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Speeding up GitHub Actions with npm cache
GitHub maintain a set of repos called actions. One of which is called cache.
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AdaGPT: My Learnings While Building a GitHub Action
To get started quickly with a JavaScript action, I recommend using the official templates from GitHub for JavaScript and TypeScript.
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Rust is not hard! Part 1: GitHub Actions
On the TypeScript side, setup was much easier. There was already a template from GitHub that took care of the basics. Most of the time spent here was updating dependencies and getting my editor to play nicely with itβ18 minutes, about 10% of the total.
- CICD pipelines written in Typescript
- Unpopular opinion: CI/CD engines are an awful idea
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Creating GitHub Actions for community engagement
Now that you know how to create your own GitHub Actions, why not give it a try? Head to the GitHub Marketplace and start exploring the existing Actions, or create your own and share it with the community. With GitHub Actions, the possibilities are endless, so start building and see what you can accomplish
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How to Debug Tests in the CI Pipeline
Your build most likely fails because your tests fail. Most CI pipelines today, like Jenkins, Circleci, GitLab, TeamCity, Bamboo, and GitHub Actions, are configured to automatically cause the build process to fail when tests fail.
What are some alternatives?
upload-artifact
codeql-action - Actions for running CodeQL analysis
sccache - Sccache is a ccache-like tool. It is used as a compiler wrapper and avoids compilation when possible. Sccache has the capability to utilize caching in remote storage environments, including various cloud storage options, or alternatively, in local storage.
ncc - Compile a Node.js project into a single file. Supports TypeScript, binary addons, dynamic requires.
act - Run your GitHub Actions locally π
get-changed-files - Get all of the files changed/modified in a pull request or push's commits.
actions-runner-controller - Kubernetes controller for GitHub Actions self-hosted runners
sticky-pull-request-comment - create comment on pull request, if exists update that comment.
setup-buildx-action - GitHub Action to set up Docker Buildx
publish-unit-test-result-action - GitHub Action to publish unit test results on GitHub
checkout - Action for checking out a repo
vercel-action - This action make a deployment with github actions instead of Vercel builder.