Skip to content
book-open

GitHub Action

showyourwork

v1 Latest version

showyourwork

book-open

showyourwork

Build reproducible scientific articles

Installation

Copy and paste the following snippet into your .yml file.

              

- name: showyourwork

uses: showyourwork/showyourwork-action@v1

Learn more about this action in showyourwork/showyourwork-action

Choose a version


The showyourwork-action runs on GitHub Actions to automatically build a showyourwork article on the cloud every time changes are pushed to the remote repository. Under the hood, this action installs conda and showyourwork, then runs the workflow to generate the article PDF, which it uploads to a separate branch on the remote. Importantly, everything is cached and all timestamps are preserved across builds, so this action will only re-run things that explicitly depend on the files that changed since the last time it ran.

This action is typically called in the workflow files .github/workflows/build.yml and .github/workflows/build-pull-request.yml of a showyourwork article repository. For more information on GitHub Actions workflow files, see here.

When setting up your GitHub repository, ensure that the GitHub Actions permissions for the GITHUB_TOKEN secret are set to permissive. First, go to

https://github.com/$USER/$REPO/settings/actions

and change the permissions to permissive:

https://show-your.work/en/latest/_images/workflow_permissions.png

Inputs

The showyourwork-action accepts any of the following inputs, all of which are optional. These are provided using the with: directive in the showyourwork step of the .yml file, one per line (see the example below).

article-cache-number

Optional The showyourwork-action caches everything in your repository to speed up future builds. Sometimes, however, it's useful to clear the cache, such as when something breaks. This can be done by incrementing this number, which tells the action which version of the cache to load. Default: 0. Note that you can disable article caching by setting this variable to null or to an empty value.

build-tarball

Optional Build a tarball for easy ArXiV submission? This tarball contains the article PDF, the rendered figures, and all the input files needed to compile the manuscript using a standard LaTeX compiler. The tarball is then pushed to the same branch as the article output (see force-push below). Default true.

conda-cache-number

Optional Bump this number to reset the conda cache. The behavior is similar to that of article-cache-number above. Default: 0. Note that you can disable conda caching by setting this variable to null or to an empty value.

github-token

Optional A token for access to GitHub (e.g. secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN). Do not set this value explicitly -- always use a secret! Default: ${{ github.token }} (usually set automatically).

output-branch-suffix

Optional Force-push output to branch <current-branch>-<output-branch-suffix>? For example, if you've pushed a commit to the main branch, this action will by default compile your paper and force-push the output (the paper PDF as well as the ArXiV tarball, if enabled) to the branch main-pdf. The force in force-push means this is not a typical git commit, as it will overwrite everything on that branch. This way, your repository won't get bloated over time with tons of committed output history. Default: pdf.

build-diff-on-pull-request

Optional Build the latexdiff version of the article, in addition to the regular article? This will build a second PDF of the article, with all changes highlighted with respect to the base branch.

latexdiff-url

Optional Specify the URL of the latexdiff script to download. You may use this to set a custom version of latexdiff.

latexdiff-options

Optional Options passed to latexdiff to render diffs on pull requests. See https://ctan.org/pkg/latexdiff?lang=en for details. Default: -t CFONT

latexpand-url

Optional Specify the URL of the latexpand script to download. You may use this to set a custom version of latexpand.

showyourwork-spec

Optional The version specification of showyourwork to install using pip. The code will be installed as pip install -U <showyourwork-spec>. Default is showyourwork (which resolves to the latest available version on PyPI).

Environment variables

There are a few environment variables that may be needed on the showyourwork side. These include $SANDBOX_TOKEN (a Zenodo Sandbox API token that can be used to authenticate when uploading or downloading files from Zenodo Sandbox deposits) and $OVERLEAF_TOKEN (credentials for accessing and modifying an Overleaf project repository). These should be provided through Action secrets using the env: directive (see the example below).

Concurrency

We recommend limiting the concurrency of showyourwork-action runs to one per branch. See the docs for details, and check out the example below.

Pull requests

If the showyourwork-action has write privileges to the repository (which is the default behavior when an owner/maintainer of the repository pushes to the remote), it force-pushes the compiled article PDF to a separate branch on the remote (if the current branch is called main, the output by default gets pushed to main-pdf). However, this will not work on pull request builds if the person issuing the pull request is not an owner or maintainer of the repository. In this case, the $GITHUB_TOKEN for the build is given only read permissions to the repository to prevent "pwn requests". While good for security reasons, this makes it difficult for the maintainer to actually see the article PDF resulting from the pull request.

To help with this, the showyourwork-action also uploads a zipped build artifact containing the compiled PDF and the article tarball (if requested). Reviewers could manually download this artifact, unzip it, and locally inspect the PDF. But to make things easier, the showyourwork-action provides a second action, showyourwork-action/process-pull-request, which runs whenever a pull request build completes. This action downloads the build artifact, unzips it, and pushes the PDF to a different branch (by default, pull-request-<NUMBER>-pdf, where NUMBER is the number of the PR). It also posts a short comment in the pull request thread with a link to the PDF for quick viewing.

Typical showyourwork repositories therefore have three workflow files: build.yml, which builds the article on simple push events (using showyourwork-action), build-pull-request.yml, which builds the article on pull request events (also using showyourwork-action), and process-pull-request.yml, which runs after the pull request build completes and uploads the PDF to a separate branch on the repository (using showyourwork-action/process-pull-request).

One thing to keep in mind is that in addition to not having write access to the repository, pull request builds from external contributors do not have access to any of the repository secrets. This means that variables such as $SANDBOX_TOKEN, $OVERLEAF_TOKEN will not be available to these builds.

If your workflow takes advantage of Zenodo caching functionality and the config setting run_cache_rules_on_ci is set to False (the default), the PR build will fail if the required cache file has not been published on Zenodo or Zenodo Sandbox. To allow external contributors to access the Zenodo cache when submitting pull requests, we recommend you locally run showyourwork cache freeze, which publishes the latest draft on Zenodo Sandbox --- the cached files can then be downloaded by an unauthenticated GET request. If, however, the pull request modified anything upstream of the cache, there will be no cache hit when the PR build is run, and the workflow will necessarily fail if run_cache_rules_on_ci is False. In these cases, we recommend that either the issuer of the PR sets run_cache_rules_on_ci to True or the reviewer checks out the PR and tests it locally.

Finally, if your workflow is integrated with Overleaf, pull request builds will not be able to either pull from or push to the Overleaf project. A warning will be thrown, but the workflow will not fail.

Example usage

Below is a complete example of a .github/workflows/build.yml file.

name: build

on:
  push:
  pull_request:

jobs:
  build:
    runs-on: ubuntu-latest
    name: Build the article PDF
    concurrency: showyourwork-${{ github.ref }}
    steps:
      - name: Checkout
        uses: actions/checkout@v3
        with:
          fetch-depth: 0

      - name: Build the article PDF
        id: build
        uses: showyourwork/showyourwork-action@v1
        env:
          SANDBOX_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.SANDBOX_TOKEN }}
          OVERLEAF_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.OVERLEAF_TOKEN }}