paths-filter
gistblog
paths-filter | gistblog | |
---|---|---|
8 | 1 | |
1,843 | 6 | |
- | - | |
6.0 | 0.0 | |
11 days ago | over 2 years ago | |
TypeScript | ||
MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
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.
paths-filter
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How to commit part of file in Git
I also set up recently the policy to onl use merge commits on stable branch, as otherwise the path filter^1 in the workflows would not detect correctly which files changed in a PR.
[1] https://github.com/dorny/paths-filter
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GitHub Actions as a time-sharing supercomputer
I truly don't understand why this isn't more widely discussed (I've seen several "GH Actions Gotchas" where this isn't mentioned). Many of the community actions also seem to be designed to run as short jobs to paper around missing features (for ex: https://github.com/dorny/paths-filter ), that end up eating up an enormous amount of your minutes budget.
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Deploy Lambda only when there are code changes
If that isn’t sufficient, there are a number of third party workflow steps that enable conditional builds with extra flexibility like https://github.com/dorny/paths-filter
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Is there a GitHub Actions equivalent to CircleCI dynamic config?
You can use paths-filter to give yourself a bunch of conditional outputs to test against for separate jobs.
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Turborepo + GitHub Actions
That's brilliant. dorny/paths-filter looks like it can eliminate my enumerate job, and then I don't have to concern myself with all this data passing between jobs.
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GitHub Actions Pitfalls
There’s an awkward gotcha/incompatibility between “Required status checks” and workflows that get skipped [1], eg due to setting a “paths” property of a push/pull_request workflow trigger [2].
The checks associated with the workflow don’t run and stay in a pending state, preventing the PR from being merged.
The only workaround I’m aware of is to use an action such as paths-filter [3] instead at the job level.
A further, related frustration/limitation - you can _only_ set the “paths” property [2] at the workflow level (i.e. not per-job), so those rules apply to all jobs in the workflow. Given that you can only build a DAG of jobs (ie “needs”) within a single workflow, it makes it quite difficult to do anything non trivial in a monorepo.
[1]: https://docs.github.com/en/repositories/configuring-branches...
[2]: https://docs.github.com/en/actions/using-workflows/workflow-...
[3]: https://github.com/dorny/paths-filter
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Configuring python linting to be part of CI/CD using GitHub actions
We are interested in running a linter only against the modified files. Let's say, we take a look at the provided repo, if I update dags/dummy.py I don't want to waste time and resources running the linter against main.py. For this purpose we use Paths Filter GitHub Action, which is very flexible.
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Introducing Gistblog 🎉: Blog your little ❤️ out using GitHub Gists
In the spirit of the #ActionsHackathon21, you can see I'm taking advantage of the checkout action GitHub provides and the Paths Filter action by dorny to create the desired workflow. I'm also using the Gistblog Action I created for this hackathon which handles managing all the blog posts as Gists. I'd like to explore Composite actions soon to see if I can reduce all of this to a single action making setup even easier.
gistblog
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Introducing Gistblog 🎉: Blog your little ❤️ out using GitHub Gists
I don't quite know what triggered it but one night in early November 2021 I decided that I wanted to start blogging every once in awhile again. It doesn't matter that few, if any, people will ever read the things I write. It's just a creative outlet. But regardless, as always I was paralyzed by all the choices I had for which blog platform/engine to use. I decided to just put my first post in a GitHub Gist to get the ball rolling, thinking I would move it elsewhere later. But then I thought it might be kind of cool to continue using Gists for blogging since it was so easy. I started looking more into the APIs and discovered that a workflow around blogging via Gists was definitely feasible. It also just so happened that the 2021 GitHub Actions Hackathon was going on, so as any good developer does... I decided to make my own Rube Goldberg machine blog engine instead of trying to pick one! A few weeks later I am happy to introduce... Gistblog!
What are some alternatives?
runner-images - GitHub Actions runner images
Developers-Playlist - A drop of musical taste from every contributor... Welcome to the developer's collaborative playlist.
changed-files - :octocat: Github action to retrieve all (added, copied, modified, deleted, renamed, type changed, unmerged, unknown) files and directories.
github-actions-hackathon-actionshackathon21 - Repository for GitHub Actions Hackathon on Dev.to 2021 [actionshackathon21]
actionlint - :octocat: Static checker for GitHub Actions workflow files
torrent-webseed-creator - Webseeded torrent creator using GitHub Actions
test-reporter - Displays test results from popular testing frameworks directly in GitHub
travis-yml - Travis CI build config processing
gh-valet - Valet helps facilitate the migration of Azure DevOps, CircleCI, GitLab CI, Jenkins, and Travis CI pipelines to GitHub Actions.
gistblog-action - Blog your little ❤️ out using GitHub Gists.
combine-prs-workflow - Combine/group together PRs (for example from Dependabot and similar services)
demo-github-actions-python-linter-configuration - This is the demo repository for the article "Configuring python linting to be part of CI/CD using GitHub actions" https://dev.to/freshbooks/configuring-python-linting-to-be-part-of-cicd-using-github-actions-1731