This Action will setup and start @wordpress/env for quick and efficient continuous integration (CI) testing with WordPress.
Use this Action in one of your project workflows steps:
jobs:
wp-env:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
name: Setup WordPress Environment
steps:
- name: Start wp-env
uses: godaddy-wordpress/setup-wp-env@v1
This Action assumes that no .wp-env.json
is present in the project that uses this Action in a workflow. If a .wp-env.json
file is present in the project, this Action config will override that config; however, if no inputs are provided that already exist in .wp-env.json
, those will be used instead (this is how @wordpress/env
is designed).
If your project includes a .wp-env.json
at root, it is best to explicitly add all necessary inputs in order to override the .wp-env.json
which exists in the project.
This action allows configuration of each option found in .wp-env.json
, except the port (it is unnecessary, as each runner is encapsulated). These are added as strings, and later converted to JSON and added to .wp-env.override.json
.
- name: Start wp-env
uses: godaddy-wordpress/setup-wp-env@v1
with:
core: 'WordPress/WordPress#5.9'
phpVersion: '7.4'
plugins: '["https://downloads.wordpress.org/plugin/coblocks.zip"]'
themes: '["https://downloads.wordpress.org/theme/go.zip"]'
Please note that when adding plugins and themes for integration testing, it is a best practice to use the official released of those projects (not development versions). This will greatly reduce the time for setup and ensures you are only downloading the necessary code for testing.
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