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Flatter

Flatter is a GitHub Action for building and hosting a Flatpak repository in a static hosting environment, such as GitHub Pages.

The action uses flatpak and flatpak-builder to build, sign and export Flatpak applications as a repository and bundles. It includes built-in caching to speed up builds and support an incrementally updated repository.

This action is ideal for low-traffic use cases, such as a nightly or development build repository for a small project. For high-traffic use cases, see Flathub instead, which also has a beta channel.

Table of Contents

Complete Example

name: Flatter

on:
  # Rebuild once a day
  schedule:
    - cron: "0 0 * * *"
  workflow_dispatch:

jobs:
  flatter:
    name: Flatter
    runs-on: ubuntu-latest
    container:
      image: ghcr.io/andyholmes/flatter/gnome:46
      options: --privileged

    strategy:
      matrix:
        arch: [x86_64, aarch64]
      fail-fast: false
      # Only one job at a time can use the shared repository cache
      max-parallel: 1

    steps:
      # Checkout a repository with Flatpak manifests
      - name: Checkout
        uses: actions/checkout@v3

      # See "Multiple Architectures" below
      - name: Setup QEMU
        if: ${{ matrix.arch == 'aarch64' }}
        id: qemu
        uses: docker/setup-qemu-action@v3
        with:
          platforms: arm64

      # See "GPG Signing" below
      - name: Setup GPG
        id: gpg
        uses: crazy-max/ghaction-import-gpg@v5
        with:
          gpg_private_key: ${{ secrets.GPG_PRIVATE_KEY }}
          passphrase: ${{ secrets.GPG_PASSPHRASE }}

      # Generate a CNAME file on-the-fly for a configured host
      - name: Generate CNAME
        run: |
          echo "flatter.andyholmes.ca" > CNAME

      - name: Build
        uses: andyholmes/flatter@main
        with:
          files: |
            build-aux/flatpak/com.example.App.json
          arch: ${{ matrix.arch }}
          gpg-sign: ${{ steps.gpg.outputs.fingerprint }}
          upload-bundles: true
          upload-pages-artifact: ${{ matrix.arch == 'aarch64' }}
          upload-pages-includes: |
            CNAME
            default.css
            index.html

  # See "Github Pages" below
  deploy:
    name: Deploy
    runs-on: ubuntu-latest
    needs: flatter
    permissions:
      pages: write
      id-token: write
    environment:
      name: github-pages
      url: ${{ steps.deployment.outputs.page_url }}

    steps:
      - name: GitHub Pages
        id: deployment
        uses: actions/deploy-pages@v1

Inputs

The only required input is files, which should be a list of paths to Flatpak manifests (JSON or YAML) to build.

Name Default Description
files None A list of paths to Flatpak manifests
arch x86_64 The architecture to build for
gpg-sign None A GPG Key fingerprint
cache-key flatter A cache key, or '' to disable

The files input may be either a single-line or multi-line string value:

# One manifest
files: one.manifestFile.json

# One or more manifests
files: |
  one.manifest.File.json
  two.manifest.File.yml

The arch input must be set if building for a non-x86-64 architecture, like aarch64. See Multiple Architectures for more information.

The gpg-sign input corresponds to the --gpg-sign command-line option and should be a GPG key fingerprint. See GPG Signing for more information.

The cache-key input is used as a base to generate cache keys for the repository and build directories. The key can be rotated if the repository becomes too large or needs to be reset for some other reason.

Deployment Options

For more information about deploying Flatter, see Deployment.

Name Default Description
upload-bundles false Upload a bundle for each application
upload-pages-artifact false Upload the repo for GitHub Pages
upload-pages-includes None Files to include in GitHub Pages

The upload-bundles input controls whether a Flatpak bundle will be uploaded when an application is built. See Flatpak Bundles for more information.

The upload-pages-artifact input controls whether the repository will be uploaded as a GitHub Pages artifact. See GitHub Pages for more information.

The upload-pages-includes input allows including additional files in the GitHub Pages artifact, such as a index.html. See GitHub Pages for more information.

Test Options

Flatter supports an opinionated test runner, dynamically rewriting Flatpak manifests to accommodate a testing environment, including a D-Bus session and X11 server. The intention is that a Flatpak manifest can be passed for testing in a CI, then passed for distribution as a nightly build if successful.

Name Default Description
run-tests false Override for the manifest's value
test-config-opts None Options for meson setup
test-modules None Manifest of test dependencies

The run-tests input overrides the manifest field of the same name, instructing flatpak-builder to run ninja test once the project is built. If this input is true, the repository cache will not be used.

The test-config-opts input is a list of extra options to pass to meson setup for the target application, used for options like -Dtests=true.

The test-modules input is a path to a manifest of extra dependencies, relative to the application manifest. This is a convenient way to keep test dependencies separate from release dependencies.

Advanced Options

For advanced use cases, extra command-line options can be passed to flatpak and flatpak-builder.

Name Default Description
flatpak-builder-args None Options for flatpak-builder
flatpak-build-bundle-args None Options for flatpak build-bundle

The flatpak-builder-args input is a multi-line string of options to pass to flatpak-builder:

flatpak-builder-args: |
  --default-branch=nightly
  --skip-if-unchanged

The following options are set internally for flatpak-builder:

  • --arch
  • --ccache
  • --disable-rofiles-fuse
  • --force-clean
  • --gpg-sign
  • --repo
  • --state-dir

The flatpak-build-bundle-args input is a multi-line string of options to pass to flatpak build-bundle:

flatpak-build-bundle-args: |
  --runtime-repo=https://platform.io/platform.flatpakrepo

The following options are set internally for flatpak build-bundle:

  • --arch
  • --gpg-sign

Outputs

The only output is repository, currently.

Name Description
repository Absolute path to the Flatpak repository

The repository output is an absolute path to the repository directory, corresponding to the --repo command-line option.

Containers

Feel free to open pull request for additional runtimes

Flatter provides containers with pre-installed runtimes for several platforms, built from the base Dockerfile:

Image Name Version Tags Architectures
freedesktop 22.08, 23.08 x86_64, aarch64
rust 23.08 x86_64, aarch64
elementary juno-22.08 x86_64
gnome 45, 46, master x86_64, aarch64
gnome-rust 45, 46 x86_64, aarch64
gnome-typescript 46 x86_64, aarch64
gnome-vala 46 x86_64, aarch64
workbench1 master x86_64, aarch64
kde 5.15-23.08 x86_64, aarch64

1 This is custom container for Workbench, based on GNOME Nightly with many language extensions installed by default.

Containers are referenced in the form ghcr.io/andyholmes/flatter/<image>:<tag>, such as ghcr.io/andyholmes/flatter/gnome:46:

name: Flatter

on:
  # Rebuild once a day
  schedule:
    - cron: "0 0 * * *"
  workflow_dispatch:

jobs:
  flatter:
    name: Flatter
    runs-on: ubuntu-latest
    container:
      image: ghcr.io/andyholmes/flatter/gnome:46
      options: --privileged

GPG Signing

Flatter supports signing the repository and bundles with GPG. First generate a GPG key for your repository:

mkdir flatter
gpg2 --homedir flatter --quick-gen-key username@github.io

Export the private key, then add the key and passphrase as GitHub Action secrets (e.g. GPG_PRIVATE_KEY and GPG_PASSPHRASE):

gpg2 --homedir flatter --armor --export-secret-key username@github.io

crazy-max/ghaction-import-gpg can be used to easily import and preset the passphrase for signing:

name: Flatter (Signed)

on:
  # Rebuild once a day
  schedule:
    - cron: "0 0 * * *"
  workflow_dispatch:

jobs:
  flatter:
    name: Flatter
    runs-on: ubuntu-latest
    container:
      image: ghcr.io/andyholmes/flatter/gnome:46
      options: --privileged

    steps:
      - name: Checkout
        uses: actions/checkout@v3

      - name: Setup GPG
        id: gpg
        uses: crazy-max/ghaction-import-gpg@v5
        with:
          gpg_private_key: ${{ secrets.GPG_PRIVATE_KEY }}
          passphrase: ${{ secrets.GPG_PASSPHRASE }}

      - name: Build
        uses: andyholmes/actions/flatter@main
        with:
          files: |
            build-aux/flatpak/com.example.App.json
          gpg-sign: ${{ steps.gpg.outputs.fingerprint }}

Deployment

Flatpak repositories generated by flatpak-builder are deployable as static assets, so deployment is quite flexible.

Flatpak Bundles

For each manifest built, Flatter can bundle and upload the application as a job artifact. The artifacts are consistently named in the form <application-id>-<architecture> (e.g. com.example.App-x86_64).

Set the upload-bundles input to true and together with nightly.link, you can get static links to the most recent Flatpak bundle built by Flatter.

GitHub Pages

Flatter can upload the repository as an artifact compatible with GitHub Pages, making the pages for the GitHub repository a Flatpak Repository. Flutter will generate an index.flatpakrepo file in the repository directory and other files can be added with the upload-pages-includes input (e.g.index.html).

  1. Set the upload-pages-artifact input to true
  2. In the Settings for the GitHub repository, select Pages in the sidebar and set Source to "GitHub Pages"
  3. Add a job with actions/deploy-pages to the workflow
name: Flatter (GitHub Pages)

on:
  # Rebuild once a day
  schedule:
    - cron: "0 0 * * *"
  workflow_dispatch:

jobs:
  flatter:
    name: Flatter
    runs-on: ubuntu-latest
    container:
      image: ghcr.io/andyholmes/flatter/gnome:46
      options: --privileged

    steps:
      - name: Checkout
        uses: actions/checkout@v3

      - name: Build
        uses: andyholmes/actions/flatter@main
        with:
          files: |
            build-aux/flatpak/com.example.App.json
          upload-pages-artifact: true
          upload-pages-includes: |
            default.css
            index.html

  deploy:
    name: Deploy
    runs-on: ubuntu-latest
    needs: flatter
    permissions:
      pages: write
      id-token: write
    environment:
      name: github-pages
      url: ${{ steps.deployment.outputs.page_url }}

    steps:
      - name: GitHub Pages
        id: deployment
        uses: actions/deploy-pages@v1

Custom Deploy

The Flatpak repository directory can also be deployed with another action, such as JamesIves/github-pages-deploy-action. The example below triggers a GitHub Pages deployment by committing the Flatpak repository to the gh-pages branch as the subfolder /repo:

name: Flatter (Deploy)

on:
  push:
    branches: [main]
  workflow_dispatch:

jobs:
  flatter:
    name: Flatter
    runs-on: ubuntu-latest
    container:
      image: ghcr.io/andyholmes/flatter/gnome:46
      options: --privileged
    permissions:
      contents: write

    steps:
      - name: Checkout
        uses: actions/checkout@v3

      - name: Build
        id: flatpak
        uses: andyholmes/actions/flatter@main
        with:
          files: |
            build-aux/flatpak/com.example.App.json

      - name: Deploy Repository
        uses: JamesIves/github-pages-deploy-action@releases/v4
        with:
          folder: ${{ steps.flatpak.outputs.repository }}
          target-folder: repo

Multiple Architectures

Flatter support building repositories with multiple architectures, such as x86_64 for desktop and aarch64 for mobile devices.

Multiple architectures can be built in a job matrix or by adding more jobs, but must not run concurrently if they share a repository directory. Either use max-parallel with matrix or use a concurrency group.

name: Flatter

on:
  # Rebuild once a day
  schedule:
    - cron: "0 0 * * *"
  workflow_dispatch:

jobs:
  flatter:
    name: Flatter
    runs-on: ubuntu-latest
    container:
      image: ghcr.io/andyholmes/flatter/gnome:46
      options: --privileged

    # A matrix can be used, but must set `max-parallel: 1`
    strategy:
      matrix:
        arch: [x86_64, aarch64]
      fail-fast: false
      max-parallel: 1

    steps:
      # Checkout a repository with Flatpak manifests
      - name: Checkout
        uses: actions/checkout@v3

      # See "Multiple Architectures"
      - name: Setup QEMU
        if: ${{ matrix.arch == 'aarch64' }}
        id: qemu
        uses: docker/setup-qemu-action@v3
        with:
          platforms: arm64

      - name: Build
        uses: andyholmes/flatter@main
        with:
          files: |
            build-aux/flatpak/com.example.App.json
          arch: ${{ matrix.arch }}

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