A thin wrapper to perform signed commits to a GitHub repository through their GraphQL APIs. Useful to create signed commits in CI/CD environments.
Offered as node module and CLI tool.
- Commit changes to a GitHub repository without cloning it locally
- By using the GitHub GraphQL API, we can commit multiple changes at once
- By using GitHub APIs, we can implicitly sign commits via web-flow signing, like vscode.dev does
- Automate the process of committing file additions, changes, or deletions to a GitHub repository without cloning it locally
- Integrate with existing CI/CD pipelines perform signed commits on behalf of the pipeline, without hard-to-setup GPG config
- Avoid storing private SSH keys in CI/CD environments (only the
GITHUB_TOKEN
is needed and can be easily saved as secret string passed as environment variable at pipeline runtime) - you name it...
I have actually written this to get signed commits in GitHub Actions running here.
GITHUB_TOKEN
must be set as environment variable. It must have write access to the repository you want to commit to- Changed (or new) files must exist locally
- for practial reasons, those files must have the same file name and file path as the ones in the repository you are replacing with your commit (or the same file name and file path you want them to have in the repository)
- Deleted files may not exist locally, and their path may just be provided as argument
- GraphQL APIs are not meant to be used to push a lot of code! If that is your case, please consider using a local clone and
git
.
- Node.js (18+)
- A GitHub token with the
repo
scope.- The token must be set in the environment variable called
GITHUB_TOKEN
.
- The token must be set in the environment variable called
Note: in GitHub Actions the GITHUB_TOKEN
is automatically generated per each run and is available as an environment variable. More info here.
npm install
export GITHUB_TOKEN='your_github_token_here'
node github.js commit \
--owner yourname \
--repo some_repo_of_yours \
--branch main \
--added .gitignore \
--commitMessage 'added .gitignore'
export GITHUB_TOKEN='your_github_token_here'
node github.js commit \
--owner yourname \
--repo some_repo_of_yours \
--branch main \
--deleted .gitignore \
--commitMessage 'remove .gitignore'
Multi-file commit is also possible:
--changed
and--deleted
may have multiple file paths, as a single string with space-separated values, or by repeating the option per each file path. All file paths must be relative to the repository root.
export GITHUB_TOKEN='your_github_token_here'
node github.js commit \
--owner yourname \
--repo some_repo_of_yours \
--branch main \
--changed 'some_dir/some_file.txt' 'some_other_dir/some_other_file.txt' \
--deleted 'some_dir/delete_me.txt' \
--deleted 'some_dir/subdir/delete_me_too.txt' \
--commitMessage 'stuff'
Use --help
for a full list of available commands and options.
The module exports the following functions:
createCommitOnBranch
checkIfBranchExists
getShaOfParentCommit
Before using any of them, you must call the init
function with the GITHUB_TOKEN
and the GitHub GraphQL URL as arguments.
init("your_github_token_here", "https://api.github.com/graphql");
If called without arguments, it will use the GITHUB_TOKEN
and GITHUB_GRAPHQL_URL
environment variables.
init();
Please refer to index.js
for the function signatures.
You can use this module as a GitHub Action. It is a Docker-based action.
# Print help
- name: Print help
uses: pirafrank/github-commit-sign@v0
with:
args: "--help"
Requirements when running in a GitHub Actions workflow:
--changed
and--deleted
may have multiple file paths, as a single string with space-separated values, or by repeating the option per each file path. All file paths must be relative to the repository root.GITHUB_TOKEN
must be set in the environment variables with write access to the repository. Go to Repository Settings > Actions > General > Workflow permissions, and setRead and write permissions
.
To commit to other repositories, you may need to override the default GITHUB_TOKEN
with a personal access token with the repo
scope. Go to Profile > Settings > Developer settings > Personal access tokens > Token (classic), and Generate new token (classic) with the full-control over repo
scope. Tip: store the generated token in repository secrets.
# Commit changes...
- name: Commit changes
id: commit_changes
uses: pirafrank/github-commit-sign@v0
if: ${{ vars.RUN_COMMIT_CHANGES == 'true' }}
env:
GITHUB_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
with:
args: "commit --owner=${{ github.repository_owner }} --repo=${{ github.event.repository.name }} --branch=${{ github.ref_name }} --commitMessage='this is a webflow signed commit' --changed new.txt dummy/subdir/changed.txt --deleted dummy/delete_me.txt another_deleted.txt"
# ...then use output details in another step
- name: Print git commit output
if: ${{ vars.RUN_COMMIT_CHANGES == 'true' }}
run: |
echo "Run command: ${{ steps.commit_changes.outputs.command }}"
echo "Commit URL: ${{ steps.commit_changes.outputs.commitUrl }}"
Tip: you may create the strings with the list of added and changed files from a previous step in your workflow.
The action accepts the same commands you can provied to the CLI. Pass them as a single string to the args
input.
Create a .env
file with your repo
-scoped GITHUB_TOKEN
, then run:
npm test
MIT