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Gatsby Publish

GitHub Action to build and deploy your Gatsby site to GitHub Pages ❤️🎩

Usage

This GitHub Action will run gatsby build at the root of your repository and deploy it to GitHub Pages for you! Here's a basic workflow example:

name: Gatsby Publish

on:
  push:
    branches:
      - dev

jobs:
  build:
    runs-on: ubuntu-latest
    steps:
      - uses: actions/checkout@v3
      - uses: enriikke/gatsby-gh-pages-action@v2
        with:
          access-token: ${{ secrets.ACCESS_TOKEN }}

NOTE: In order to support npm and yarn, this Action relies on having a build script defined in your package.json file. Gatsby automatically defines this script whenever you start a new project via gatsby new, which in turn calls gatsby build.

Knobs & Handles

This Action is fairly simple but it does provide you with a couple of configuration options:

  • access-token: A GitHub Personal Access Token with the repo scope. This is required to push the site to your repo after Gatsby finish building it. You should store this as a secret in your repository. Provided as an input.

  • deploy-branch: The branch expected by GitHub to have the static files needed for your site. For org and user pages it should always be master. This is where the output of gatsby build will be pushed to. Provided as an input. Defaults to master.

  • deploy-repo: The repository expected by GitHub to have the static files needed for your site. Provided as an input. Defaults to the same repository that runs this action.

  • gatsby-args: Additional arguments that get passed to gatsby build. See the Gatsby documentation for a list of allowed options. Provided as an input. Defaults to nothing.

  • skip-publish: Builds your Gatsby site but skips publishing by setting it to true, effectively performing a test of the build process using the live configuration. Provided as an input. Defaults to false

  • working-dir: The directory where your Gatsby source files are at. gatsby build will run from this directory. Provided as an input. Defaults to the project's root.

  • git-config-name: Provide a custom name that is used to author the git commit, which is pushed to the deploy branch. Provided as an input. Defaults to the GitHub username of the action actor.

  • git-config-email: Provide a custom email that is used to author the git commit, which is pushed to the deploy branch. Provided as an input. Defaults to {actor}@users.noreply.github.com, where {actor} is the GitHub username of the action actor.

Org or User Pages

Create a repository with the format <YOUR/ORG USERNAME>.github.io, push your Gatsby source code to a branch other than master and add this GitHub Action to your workflow! 🚀😃

Repository Pages

Repo pages give you the option to push your static site to either master or gh-pages branches. They also work a little different because the URL includes a trailing path with the repository name, like https://username.github.io/reponame/. You need to tell Gatsby what the path prefix is via gatsby-config.js:

module.exports = {
  pathPrefix: "/reponame",
}

Additionally, you need to tell the gatsby build command to use it by passing the --prefix-paths as an argument. Here's an example workflow for that:

name: Gatsby Publish

on:
  push:
    branches:
      - dev

jobs:
  build:
    runs-on: ubuntu-latest
    steps:
      - uses: actions/checkout@v3
      - uses: enriikke/gatsby-gh-pages-action@v2
        with:
          access-token: ${{ secrets.ACCESS_TOKEN }}
          deploy-branch: gh-pages
          gatsby-args: --prefix-paths

Provides build validation on pull request if required:

name: Gatsby Publish

on:
  pull_request:
    branches:
      - dev

jobs:
  build:
    runs-on: ubuntu-latest
    steps:
      - uses: actions/checkout@v3
      - uses: enriikke/gatsby-gh-pages-action@v2
        with:
          access-token: ${{ secrets.ACCESS_TOKEN }}
          deploy-branch: gh-pages
          gatsby-args: --prefix-paths
          skip-publish: true

CNAME

You have a custom domain you would like to use? Fancy! 😎 This Action's got you covered! Assuming you have already set up your DNS provider as defined in the GitHub Pages docs, all we need next is a CNAME file at the root of your project with the domain you would like to use. For example:

imenrique.com

Notice that it's all capitals CNAME 😊.

This is how GitHub keeps track of the domain you want to use. This action will copy the file to the public directory generated by Gatsby before pushing your site so that the domain is persisted between deploys.

Assumptions

This Action assumes that your Gatsby code sits at the root of your repository and gatsby build outputs to the public directory. As of this writing, Gatsby doesn't provide a way to customize the build directory so this should be a safe assumption.

Additionally, a build script on package.json is expected for this Action to to work (as mentioned at the beginning). Ultimately, this is what calls gatsby build.

That's It

Have fun building! ✨