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Exploring CI/CD with a Profile README.md

Profile READMEs are a fun easter egg on GitHub. If you create a repository on your personal account with the same name as your username, the README.md in this repository will be displayed on your profile page.

Here's an example.

In this hands on workshop, we explore the topic of CI/CD using GitHub Actions and your Profile README.md.

The Workshop

Prerequisites

Join the GoogleDeveloperAcademy Organization:

Instructions will be made available for doing so, reach out to an instructor if you bump into any issues.

Configure Node.js:

Install nvm (the Node Version Manager), and use this to configure the most recent release of Node 14 on your computer:

nvm install 14
nvm use 14

Use this repository as a template

Using this repository as a template, create a new repository on your personal account with the same name as your username:

Personalize your profile page

Let's personalize your biography:

  1. Clone the repository you've just created (I recommend using ssh).
  2. Create a branch to commit your changes on, cd [my-user-name], git checkout -b personalize.
  3. Replace the contents of README.md with the contents of README.example.md.

README.example.md is meant as a starting point, customize this to match your bio. Make sure to leave a link to ./interests.svg as this is used in the following steps in the exercise.

  1. Edit the contents of interests.json to match your interests (this file is used to generate the pie chart on your profile page).
  2. Install the project's dependencies, npm i.
  3. Generate a new pie chart, npm run generate.

Open a pull request

Having made your changes locally, push them to GitHub and open a pull request:

  1. git commit -a -m 'docs: update bio to reflect myself'.
  2. git push origin personalize.
  3. Visit GitHub and create a pull request. Don't merge the pull request immediately.

Look closely at your pull request

You may notice that at the bottom of your pull request, there are a few failing checks:

You may be asking yourself, where did these come from?

When you created your repository, it included the file .github/workflows/ci.yaml:

  on:
  push:
      branches:
      - main
  pull_request:
  name: ci
  jobs:
  test:
      runs-on: ubuntu-latest
      strategy:
      matrix:
          node: [12, 14, 15]
      steps:
      - uses: actions/checkout@v2
      - uses: actions/setup-node@v2
          with:
          node-version: ${{ matrix.node }}
      - run: node --version
      - run: npm install
      - run: npm test

This file describes a GitHub Action workflow which will run unit tests when a pull request is open. When you edited interests.json, you broke some of the unit tests described in test.js.

Automated tests are an important part of Continuous Integration, because they ensure that the code that lands on the main branch is passing.

Getting tests passing

  1. run npm t locally, this will show you which tests are currently failing.
  2. the most likely culprit for failures is the test case, must only list Ben's interests. This feels like it is perhaps overly specific!
  3. go ahead and remove this test case, and fix any other tests that are failing.
  4. once tests are passing locally, again commit your changes and push to the remote branch, git commit -a -m 'test: fixed failing tests', git push origin personalize.

Revisit your pull request

After a minute or two, you should again see all tests have passed:

Go ahead and merge your pull request, and visit your profile page on GitHub (github.com/[your-user-name]).

You should see your own personalized profile README.md 🎉

What's next?

One shortcoming of our profile page generator is that we rely on someone running npm run generate locally to ensure that our pie chart is updated.

bcoe has updated their repository with a workflow called update-svg.yaml, which automatically pushes an updated version of interests.svg, when changes are landed to the main branch.

Use this file as a starting point, and try adding similar functionality to your repository. Once configured, any updates to interests.json should be reflected in an automated pull request, like this.

Pushing code automatically to a branch like this is analogous to Continuous Deployment.

You're done!

That's the end of the workshop 🥳

But, I encourage you to continue personalizing your README.md, and to keep experimenting with GitHub Actions.

License

Apache Version 2.0

See LICENSE

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template demonstrating CI/CD using GitHub actions

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