Note
This action has been deprecated in favor of the buf-action
which combines the
functionality of buf-lint-action
with the ability to run Buf commands in the same step. Please
see the buf-action
documentation for more information.
This Action enables you to lint Protobuf files with Buf in your GitHub Actions pipelines. If
it detects violations of your configured lint rules, it automatically creates inline
comments under the rule-breaking lines in your .proto
files.
Here's an example usage of buf-lint-action
:
on: pull_request # Apply to all pull requests
jobs:
lint-protos:
# Run `git checkout`
- uses: actions/checkout@v2
# Install the `buf` CLI
- uses: bufbuild/buf-setup-action@v1
# Lint your Protobuf sources
- uses: bufbuild/buf-lint-action@v1
With this configuration, the buf
CLI runs the lint checks specified in your buf.yaml
configuration file. If any violations are detected, buf-lint-action
creates inline comments under
the rule-breaking lines in your .proto
files in the pull request.
For buf-lint-action
to work, you need to install the buf
CLI in the GitHub Actions Runner first.
We recommend using buf-setup-action
to install it (as in the example
above).
Parameter | Description | Required | Default |
---|---|---|---|
input |
The path of the Buf input you want to lint check | . |
|
buf_token |
The Buf authentication token used for any private input | ✅ |
These parameters are derived from
action.yml
Some repositories are structured in such a way that their buf.yaml
is defined in a
sub-directory alongside their Protobuf sources, such as a proto
directory. Here's an example:
$ tree
.
└── proto
├── acme
│ └── weather
│ └── v1
│ └── weather.proto
└── buf.yaml
In that case, you can target the proto
sub-directory by setting input
to proto
:
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v2
- uses: bufbuild/buf-setup-action@v1
# Run lint only in the `proto` sub-directory
- uses: bufbuild/buf-lint-action@v1
with:
input: proto