auth
action-tmate
auth | action-tmate | |
---|---|---|
13 | 13 | |
826 | 2,652 | |
2.9% | - | |
7.6 | 5.5 | |
17 days ago | 19 days ago | |
TypeScript | JavaScript | |
Apache License 2.0 | 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.
auth
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Push code with GitHub Actions to Google Cloud’s Artifact Registry
This workflow will authenticate with Google Cloud using the Google Cloud auth GitHub Action and use Docker to authenticate and push to the registry. To make this workflow work (or flow?) we need to set up some Google Cloud resources and add in those values for our environment variables. Make sure to add in the value for PROJECT_ID where you have permission to create resources. The value for IMAGE_NAME can be anything — it’ll be created the first time this workflow runs:
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GitHub Actions could be so much better
The issue of integration with other tools is also quite strange. Of course, this is not directly related to github actions. For example, what needs to be done to use cloud run https://github.com/google-github-actions/auth#setting-up-wor...
- you must have the "bigquery.datasets.create" permission on the selected project
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IAM Best Practices [cheat sheet included]
While it is commonly associated with AWS, and their AWS IAM service, IAM is not limited to their platform. All cloud providers, such as Google Cloud and Azure DevOps, offer IAM solutions that allow users to access resources and systems. If you are looking for specific AWS IAM best practices, look no further than our AWS IAM Security Best Practices article:\ For the rest of this article, we will look at the generic best practices that have evolved over the last decade around each part of the basic question we started with, "who can access what?":
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How would I use Github Actions to run a Python Script to make changes to a Google Sheets Spreadsheet?
I found this but I don't quite get how it works. I haven't done all the steps yet but I get how to set it up. I just don't understand how this just magically authenticates future steps since my code still needs a token. Should I use this to authenticate the script? If so, how do I do it and what would I need in my code? If not what should I use instead?
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Cloud Incident Response
Cloud Identity and Access Management: This service provides fine-grained control over who has access to what resources within an organization's Google Cloud environment. It can be used to quickly revoke access to compromised accounts or limit access to sensitive resources. https://cloud.google.com/iam
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Advanced GitHub Actions - Conditional Workflow
I use google-github-actions/auth in the first step in my job to authenticate to GCP. At this point, I have 6 different GitHub secrets to test out the concept. Each branch has two secrets with the format BRANCH_WIP and BRANCH_SA.
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Learning Journal 3: Brainstorm a deployment process from GitHub to Google App Engine and Cloud SQL (Part 2)
There are 2 core parts authentication to GCP and App Engine deployment. Authentication is performed using auth, while a deployment uses deploy-appengine.
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CI/CD from GitHub to Google Cloud Platform(GAE)
You should have a look at using workload identity federation and OIDC tokens. There’s a guide on https://github.com/google-github-actions/auth It means you no longer need to hardcode service account credentials in GitHub secrets anymore.
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Learning Journal 2: Brainstorm a deployment process from GitHub to Google App Engine and Cloud SQL (Part 1)
Yes, there is a deploy-appengine action that automates the whole App Engine deployment process. Indeed, it uses gcloud commands underneath too. Either way, both approaches need an auth action to authenticate to GCP before any task can be performed.
action-tmate
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How to debug GitHub actions. Real-world example
The go-to method of debugging GitHub Actions is tmate. With tmate we can connect to our running Action terminal and see what is going on there by executing some simple commands!
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GitHub Actions Are a Problem
In addition to the suggestions others have made for locally testing workflows, there are also reverse shell actions[0] that can be used for troubleshooting CI failures on the GH runners themselves.
[0] https://github.com/mxschmitt/action-tmate
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GitHub Actions could be so much better
Been through that git commit; git push; repeat cycle too much as well until i discovered https://github.com/mxschmitt/action-tmate which gives a shell in between steps, which does not help with all problems but sure it's makes it less painful at times.
- How do you debug CI/CD pipelines? Breakpoints?
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How easy is it to troubleshoot GHA workflows?
In addition to everything here, I also will set up https://github.com/mxschmitt/action-tmate when I’m debugging. It helps tremendously since you can temporarily access the server.
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Act: Run your GitHub Actions locally
Unfortunately act is only capable of running very simple workflows. I've found this action to be more useful against the endless PR stream: https://github.com/mxschmitt/action-tmate
You drop it in your workflow and get an SSH shell into the worker, figure things out iteratively, then push when it's working.
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CI/CD using GitHub Actions for Rails and Docker
Solution: Tip o' the hat to Daniela Baron here, there's a real life saver of tool call tmate.
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Hosting VMs on GitHub Actions?
Here's a recent case where users of tmate - which lets you SSH into an actions worker - reported problems: https://github.com/mxschmitt/action-tmate/issues/104
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Github actions error while pushing code to package registry
see: https://github.com/mxschmitt/action-tmate
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Work with GitHub Actions in Your Terminal with GitHub CLI
Thought I'd get their docs updated - https://github.com/mxschmitt/action-tmate#manually-triggered...
What are some alternatives?
Aegis - A free, secure and open source app for Android to manage your 2-step verification tokens.
reverse-rdp-windows-github-actions - Reverse Remote Desktop into Windows on GitHub Actions for Debugging and/or Job Introspection [GET https://api.github.com/repos/nelsonjchen/reverse-rdp-windows-github-actions: 403 - Repository access blocked]
angular-auth-oidc-client - npm package for OpenID Connect, OAuth Code Flow with PKCE, Refresh tokens, Implicit Flow
act - Run your GitHub Actions locally 🚀
google-auth-library-nodejs - 🔑 Google Auth Library for Node.js
floatly - An extension that adds a floating button for browser quick actions
mongodb-github-action - Use MongoDB in GitHub Actions
azure-pipelines-agent - Azure Pipelines Agent 🚀
github-activity-readme - Updates README with the recent GitHub activity of a user
harden-runner - Network egress filtering and runtime security for GitHub-hosted and self-hosted runners
ssh-agent - GitHub Action to setup `ssh-agent` with a private key