GitHub Action
comment-actions
GitHub Action to create, update, or add a reaction to any issue or pull request
- Create a comment
- Update a comment
- Add a reaction to a comment
- Create or update a comment from a markdown file
- Create or update a comment from a markdown file with template variable rendering
The section below will contain a few common examples for how you can use this Action
- name: Create comment
uses: GrantBirki/comment@vX.X.X
with:
body: |
This is a multi-line test comment
- With GitHub **Markdown** β¨
- Cool!
reactions: '+1'
This will create a brand new comment on an issue/pr with the comment body seen above. It will also add a π reaction
- name: Update comment
uses: GrantBirki/comment@vX.X.X
with:
comment-id: 123456789
body: |
**Edit:** Some additional info
reactions: eyes
This will update the comment with the comment body seen above in the default
append
mode. It will also add a π reaction
- name: Add reactions
uses: GrantBirki/comment@vX.X.X
with:
comment-id: 123456789
reactions: heart, hooray, laugh
This will add three reactions to the comment specified by the comment-id
- name: Create comment from markdown file
uses: GrantBirki/comment@vX.X.X
with:
file: demo/plain-sample.md
This will create a comment and use the markdown file contents as the comment body
- name: Create comment from markdown file with variables
uses: GrantBirki/comment@vX.X.X
with:
file: demo/render-sample.md
vars: |
sha: ${{ github.sha }}
environment: production
app: cool-app
This will create a comment and use the markdown file contents as the comment body with the variables specified in the vars section for template rendering
For more information about templating, be sure to check out the templating section below
Name | Description | Required | Default |
---|---|---|---|
token |
GITHUB_TOKEN (issues: write , pull-requests: write ) or a repo scoped PAT |
true | ${{ github.token }} |
repository |
The full name of the repository in which to create or update a comment | true | ${{ github.repository }} |
issue-number |
The number of the issue or pull request in which to create a comment | true | ${{ github.event.number }} |
comment-id |
The id of the comment to update | false | |
body |
The comment body (string) | false | |
file |
The path to a file to use as a comment body | false | |
vars |
Template variables in yaml format for rendering with a provided file | false | |
edit-mode |
The mode when updating a comment, replace or append |
false | append |
reactions |
A comma separated list of reactions to add to the comment (+1 , -1 , laugh , confused , heart , hooray , rocket , eyes ) |
false |
Name | Description |
---|---|
comment-id |
The ID of the created comment |
The ID of the created comment will be output for use in later steps Note that in order to read the step output the action step must have an id.
- name: Create comment
uses: GrantBirki/comment@vX.X.X
id: comment
with:
body: hello world
- name: Check outputs
run: echo "Comment ID - ${{ steps.comment.outputs.comment-id }}"
Common error:
Missing either 'issue-number' or 'comment-id'
The issue-number
field can be omitted depending on the type of workflow you are using and it will attempt to find the PR/issue number from the event context automatically
The fallback value is as follows: ${{ github.event.number }}
You can always pass in an exact value for the issue-number
field if you wish to override the automatic lookup. The example below obtains the issue number from the event context in a specific way:
with:
issue-number: ${{ github.event.issue.number }}
Note: Pull Requests are just Issues under the hood, so when we refer to the
issue-number
that could also be exchanged for a PR number
There are two ways to leverage templates using this Action:
- Simple Template - Just pass in a
file: <path>
to the Action - Template Rendering - Pass in a
file: <path>
andvars: <values>
to the Action
β οΈ Important: Make sure to run the action/checkout Action before this Action if using thefile:
input so the action can actually read files from your repo
file
and vars
explained:
file
is the path to a markdown file in your repository to load as a templatevars
are template variables to use when rendering your markdown file template
The vars
input is a yaml string that will be parsed and converted to a map of key/value pairs. An example can be seen below
Actions workflow:
with:
file: demo/render-sample.md
vars: |
sha: ${{ github.sha }}
environment: production
app: cool-app
Markdown Template:
# Deployment Status π
**{{ app }}** has been successfully deployed to **{{ environment }}**
- SHA: `{{ sha }}`
This Action uses nunjucks to render template files with the vars
variables provided. You can fully leverage all the features nunjucks has to offer to custimize templates to your heart's content.
An example of a markdown template file can be seen here. When this Action runs, it will render the demo/render-sample.md
file with the vars
provided to dynamically generate the comment body!
You can even pass in GitHub Actions context variables as seen above (ex: ${{ github.sha }}
)
Checkout a sample workflow file here to see this in action
This example shows how you can iterate over an array of values and populate a template with them:
jobs:
example:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- id: run
run: echo "files=a,b,c" >> "$GITHUB_OUTPUT"
- uses: GrantBirki/comment@vX.X.X
with:
# other config
vars: |
files: ${{ steps.run.outputs.files }}
body: |
# Files
{% for file in files.split(",") %}
- `{{ file }}`
{% else %}
- No file
{% endfor %}
Source: #11
How to find the id of a comment will depend a lot on the use case
Here is one example where the id can be found in the github
context during an issue_comment
event:
on:
issue_comment:
types: [created]
jobs:
commentCreated:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- name: Add reaction
uses: GrantBirki/comment@vX.X.X
with:
comment-id: ${{ github.event.comment.id }}
reactions: eyes
You can also use the find-comment Action to locate the comment id in many different ways
If you are trying to use this Action with its template features, you will need to checkout the repository first before calling this Action. This ensure the proper files are available to be read by the Action. If your actions/checkout
job fails with Repository Not Found
, it is likely due to missing permissions. Try adding this at the top of your Actions workflow file:
permissions:
issues: write # needed for creating comments on issues
pull-requests: write # needed for creating comments on pull requests
contents: read # bingo!
Assigning read
to the contents
permission will allow Actions to checkout your repository
Common causes can be seen below
In public repositories this action does not work in pull_request
workflows when triggered by forks
Any attempt will be met with the error, Resource not accessible by integration
This Action needs write
access to issue, pull requests, or both depending on how you are using it:
permissions:
issues: write
pull-requests: write
You can create and update comments in another repository by using a PAT instead of GITHUB_TOKEN
.
The user associated with the PAT must have write access to the repository
This Action was largely inspired by the create-or-update-comment Action by @peter-evans. In fact, it shared the majority of the code with that Action. The reason this Action was created was because a comment Action was needed that supported template rendering and was not available in the create-or-update-comment
. It was suggested to use a second Action render-template and pass the outputs of that Action into the create-or-update-comment
Action.
This Action solves that problem by using the nunjucks package for full template rendering