🚀 Automatically deploy your project to GitHub Pages using GitHub Actions. This action can be configured to push your production-ready code into any branch you'd like.
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GitHub Pages Deploy Action 🚀

Build Status Actions Status View Action Version

This GitHub action will handle the deploy process of your project to GitHub Pages. It can be configured to upload your production-ready code into any branch you'd like, including gh-pages and docs.

Getting Started ✈️

You can include the action in your workflow to trigger on any event that GitHub actions supports. If the remote branch that you wish to deploy to doesn't already exist the action will create it for you. Your workflow will also need to include the actions/checkout@v1 step before this workflow runs in order for the deployment to work.

You can view an example of this below.

name: Build and Deploy
on: [push]
jobs:
  build-and-deploy:
    runs-on: ubuntu-latest
    steps:
    - name: Checkout
      uses: actions/checkout@v1

    - name: Build and Deploy
      uses: JamesIves/github-pages-deploy-action@releases/v3
      with:
        ACCESS_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.ACCESS_TOKEN }}
        BRANCH: gh-pages # The branch the action should deploy to.
        FOLDER: build # The folder the action should deploy.

If you'd like to make it so the workflow only triggers on push events to specific branches then you can modify the on section.

on:
  push:	
    branches:	
      - master

Operating System Support 💿

This action is primarily developed using Ubuntu. In your workflow job configuration it's reccomended to set the runs-on property to ubuntu-latest.

jobs:
  build-and-deploy:
    runs-on: ubuntu-latest

Operating systems such as Windows are not currently supported, however you can workaround this using artifacts. In your workflow configuration you can utilize the actions/upload-artifact and actions/download-artifact actions to move your project built on a Windows job to a secondary job that will handle the deployment.

You can view an example of this pattern here.

name: Build and Deploy
on: [push]
jobs:
  build:
    runs-on: windows-latest # The first job utilizes windows-latest
    steps:
      - name: Checkout
        uses: actions/checkout@v1
        
      - name: Install # The project is built using npm and placed in the 'build' folder.
        run: |
          npm install
          npm run-script build
                    
      - name: Upload Artifacts # The project is then uploaded as an artifact named 'site'.
        uses: actions/upload-artifact@v1
        with:
          name: site
          path: build
          
  deploy:
    needs: [build] # The second job must depend on the first one to complete before running, and uses ubuntu-latest instead of windows.
    runs-on: ubuntu-latest
    steps:
      - name: Checkout
        uses: actions/checkout@v1
 
      - name: Download Artifacts # The built project is downloaded into the 'site' folder.
        uses: actions/download-artifact@v1
        with:
          name: site

      - name: Build and Deploy
        uses: JamesIves/github-pages-deploy-action@releases/v3
        with:
          ACCESS_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.ACCESS_TOKEN }}
          BRANCH: gh-pages
          FOLDER: 'site' # The deployment folder should match the name of the artifact. Even though our project builds into the 'build' folder the artifact name of 'site' must be placed here.

Configuration 📁

The with portion of the workflow must be configured before the action will work. You can add these in the with section found in the examples above. Any secrets must be referenced using the bracket syntax and stored in the GitHub repositories Settings/Secrets menu. You can learn more about setting environment variables with GitHub actions here.

Below you'll find a description of what each option does.

Key Value Information Type Required
ACCESS_TOKEN Depending on the repository permissions you may need to provide the action with a GitHub personal access token instead of the provided GitHub token in order to deploy. You can learn more about how to generate one here. This should be stored as a secret. secrets / with Yes
GITHUB_TOKEN In order for GitHub to trigger the rebuild of your page you must provide the action with the repositories provided GitHub token. This can be referenced in the workflow yml file by using ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}. Only required if an access token is not provided. Please note there is currently an issue affecting the use of this token, you can learn more here. secrets / with Yes
BRANCH This is the branch you wish to deploy to, for example gh-pages or docs. with Yes
FOLDER The folder in your repository that you want to deploy. If your build script compiles into a directory named build you'd put it here. Folder paths cannot have a leading / or ./. If you wish to deploy the root directory you can place a . here. with Yes
TARGET_FOLDER If you'd like to push the contents of the deployment folder into a specific directory on the deployment branch you can specify it here. with No
BASE_BRANCH The base branch of your repository which you'd like to checkout prior to deploying. This defaults to the current commit SHA that triggered the build followed by master if it doesn't exist. This is useful for making deployments from another branch, and also may be neccersary when using a scheduled job. with No
CLEAN If your project generates hashed files on build you can use this option to automatically delete them from the deployment branch with each deploy. This option can be toggled on by setting it to true. with No
CLEAN_EXCLUDE If you need to use CLEAN but you'd like to preserve certain files or folders you can use this option. This should be formatted as an array but stored as a string. For example: '["filename.js", "folder"]' with No

With the action correctly configured you should see the workflow trigger the deployment under the configured conditions.

Additional Build Files

This action maintains the full Git history of the deployment branch. Therefore if you're using a custom domain and require a CNAME file, or if you require the use of a .nojekyll file, you can safely commit these files directly into deployment branch without them being overridden after each deployment.

Example