π Frenck's GitHub Action for running a Home Assistant Core configuration check.
This GitHub action runs a Home Assistant Core configuration check against your repository.
Please note; that this Action is useable for all Home Assistant installation types, and thus NOT limited to Home Assistant Core users. It also works if you are running Home Assistant Container, Supervised or OS.
name: Check
on: [push, pull_request]
jobs:
home-assistant:
name: Home Assistant Core Configuration Check
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- name: β€΅οΈ Check out configuration from GitHub
uses: actions/checkout@v3
- name: π Run Home Assistant Configuration Check
uses: frenck/action-home-assistant@v1
with:
path: "./config"
secrets: fakesecrets.yaml
version: stable
Input | Description | Usage |
---|---|---|
env_file |
Possible path to environment file to use. | Optional |
path |
Path to the folder containing the Home Assistant Core configuration. | Optional |
secrets |
Alternative secrets file to use, e.g., "fakesecrets.yaml". | Optional |
version |
Version to use; dev/beta/stable or a specific version number. | Optional |
By default, this GitHub Action will use the root folder as the Home Assistant
Core configuration folder. If you store your Home Assistant configuration in a
subfolder, the path
argument can be used to inform the Action about that.
For example, if your configuration is in the config
folder:
- name: π Run Home Assistant Core Configuration Check
uses: frenck/action-home-assistant@v1
with:
path: "./config"
Of course, you don't want to commit your secrets file. However, without a secrets file, your configuration check will most likely not pass.
This GitHub Action offers a way around that, but using a fake secrets file.
To use this, add a fake secrets file to your repository (e.g.,
fakesecrets.yaml
) and make sure the content is the same as your real
secrets.yaml
(with, of course, fake credentials/data). The GitHub Action
will use this file while checking your configuration.
For example, if you fake secrets file is fakesecrets.yaml
:
- name: π Run Home Assistant Core Configuration Check
uses: frenck/action-home-assistant@v1
with:
secrets: "fakesecrets.yaml"
This GitHub Action allows you to specify a specific version to run
your Home Assistant Core configuration against. However, by default, the
integration will try to find the .HA_VERSION
file in your configuration
folder.
If the .HA_VERSION
file is found, the version in that file is used. If
the .HA_VERSION
file is not found; the Action will use the latest stable
version of Home Assistant to test your configuration.
However, you can specify/override any version you like to check against,
for example, check with Home Assistant Core 2021.1.0
:
- name: π Run Home Assistant Core Configuration Check
uses: frenck/action-home-assistant@v1
with:
version: "2021.1.0"
Alternatively, you can also use stable
, beta
or dev
to run against
the latest versions of those stability channels.
- name: π Run Home Assistant Core Configuration Check
uses: frenck/action-home-assistant@v1
with:
version: beta
A more extensive example, that runs your configuration against the latest development, beta and stable versions:
name: Check
on: [push, pull_request]
jobs:
home-assistant:
name: "Home Assistant Core ${{ matrix.version }} Configuration Check"
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
strategy:
matrix:
version: ["stable", "beta", "dev"]
steps:
- name: β€΅οΈ Check out configuration from GitHub
uses: actions/checkout@v3
- name: π Run Home Assistant Configuration Check
uses: frenck/action-home-assistant@v1
with:
path: "./config"
secrets: fakesecrets.yaml
version: "${{ matrix.version }}"
The following repositories are using this GitHub Action, and thus provide you with some real-world uses of this GitHub Action.
- Frenck's Home Assistant Configuration
- Klaasnicolaas - Student Home Assistant Configuration
- Metbril's π Home Assistant Configuration
- ntilley905's Home Assistant Configuration
- robbrad's Home Assistant Configuration
- Pinkywafer's Home Assistant Configuration
Are you using this GitHub Action? Feel free to open up a PR to add your configuration to this list π
This repository keeps a change log using GitHub's releases functionality.
Releases are based on Semantic Versioning, and use the format
of MAJOR.MINOR.PATCH
. In a nutshell, the version will be incremented
based on the following:
MAJOR
: Incompatible or major changes.MINOR
: Backwards-compatible new features and enhancements.PATCH
: Backwards-compatible bugfixes and package updates.
You can specify which version of this GitHub Action your workflow should use. And even allowing for using the latest major or minor version.
For example; this will use release v1.1.1
of a GitHub Action:
- name: π Run Home Assistant Configuration Check
uses: frenck/action-home-assistant@v1.1.1
While the following example, will use the v1.1.x
minor release, for example
if v1.1.2
is the latest releases (starting with v1.1
), this will run
v1.1.2
:
- name: π Run Home Assistant Configuration Check
uses: frenck/action-home-assistant@v1.1
As in the examples throughout the documentation, the following example is
locked on major version, meaning any v1.x.x
latest version will be used,
as long as it is version 1.
- name: π Run Home Assistant Configuration Check
uses: frenck/action-home-assistant@v1
The advantage of locking against a more specific version, is that it prevents surprises if an issue or breaking changes were introduced in a newer release.
The disadvantage of being more specific, is that it requires you to keep things up to date. Fortunately, GitHub has a tool for that, called: Dependabot.
Dependabot can automatically open a pull request on your repository to update this Action for you. You can instantly see if the new version works (as the pull request shows the success or failure status) and you can decide to merge it in by hitting the merge button. Quick, easy and always up2date.
To enable Dependabot, create a file called .github/dependabot.yaml
:
version: 2
updates:
- package-ecosystem: "github-actions"
directory: "/"
schedule:
interval: daily
Your all set! Dependabot will now check (and update) your GitHub actions every day. π€©
This is an active open-source project. We are always open to people who want to use the code or contribute to it.
We've set up a separate document for our contribution guidelines.
Thank you for being involved! π
The original setup of this repository is by Franck Nijhof.
For a full list of all authors and contributors, check the contributor's page.
MIT License
Copyright (c) 2021-2023 Franck Nijhof
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.