-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 0
New issue
Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.
By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.
Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account
Last minute notes #9
Comments
Publishing your actionsPublishing your actions is a great way to help others in your team and across the GitHub community. Although actions do not need to be published to be consumed by adding them to the marketplace you make them easier to find. Some notable actions you will find on the marketplace are: And that just scratches the surface of the 2000+ and counting actions you will find on the marketplace 😄 📖Follow this guide to learn how to publish your actions to the GitHub Marketplace |
The End 😭It was so fun having you as a student while taking this course. I'll forever cherish our time together Cemberk You can keep this repository forever to remember our time... I actually encourage you to do so! This has now become your central point for notes on writing Docker actions 😄 I really do think of everything! Make sure to visit Learning Lab for more courses on GitHub Actions and other awesome tech content. We would love to hear what you thought about this course, share your experience with us and others in the Community forum To fully complete your course close this issue |
Great job!
You did it 🎉
You have successfully written three different Docker actions.
Let's take a quick look at all the things you learned in this course:
Workflows
Along the way you learned a little about workflows and how to configure them. You managed to accomplish all these things:
That's quite a bit for a course that doesn't cover workflows!
Action metadata
action.yml
fileinputs:
andoutputs:
allowed you to create more dynamic and reusable metadata files for your actions.Docker actions
Wow, what a series of tasks! You started with the traditional
hello world
in the console, which was then expanded to use theinput:
parameters specified in the actions metadata. Through the use of that metadata you were able to be flexible with your greeting.You learned how GitHub Actions behave when consuming external APIs and you also used the response from an external API as an
output:
parameter for a later step in the workflow.Lastly you saw how to use actions to interact with a repository by creating an issue containing a joke.
You used multiple languages to write your action source code.
At this point you are armed with everything you need to know to go out there and begin creating your own custom Docker actions.
We aren't done yet 😉
I also want to take a few minutes to point you to the information you need to place your own custom actions on the GitHub Marketplace for others to use.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: