160 lines
9.9 KiB
Markdown
160 lines
9.9 KiB
Markdown
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# Manual Workflow Approval
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Pause a StackitGit Actions workflow and require manual approval from one or more approvers before continuing.
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This is a very common feature for a deployment or release pipeline.
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*Note: This approval duration is subject to the broader 4 hours timeout for a workflow, as well as usage costs. So keep that in mind when figuring out how quickly an approver must respond. See [limitations](#limitations) for more information.*
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*Note: A cheaper but less automatic solution using split jobs and workflow dispatcher can be seen in [here](workflow_dispatcher.md)
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The way this action works is the following:
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1. Workflow comes to the `manual-approval` action.
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1. `manual-approval` will create an issue in the containing repository and assign it to the `approvers`.
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1. If and once all approvers respond with an approved keyword, the workflow will continue.
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1. If any of the approvers responds with a denied keyword, then the workflow will exit with a failed status.
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* Approval keywords - "approve", "approved", "lgtm", "yes"
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* Denied keywords - "deny", "denied", "no"
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These are case insensitive with optional punctuation either a period or an exclamation mark.
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In all cases, `manual-approval` will close the initial StackitGit issue.
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## Usage
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```yaml
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steps:
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- uses: https://stackit.git.onstackit.cloud/actions/manual-approval@v1
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with:
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secret: ${{ github.TOKEN }}
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approvers: user1,user2,org-team1
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minimum-approvals: 1
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issue-title: "Deploying v1.3.5 to prod from staging"
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issue-body: "Please approve or deny the deployment of version v1.3.5."
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issue-body-file-path: relative/file_path/wrt/repo/root
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exclude-workflow-initiator-as-approver: false
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fail-on-denial: true
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additional-approved-words: ''
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additional-denied-words: ''
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polling-interval-seconds: 10
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```
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* `approvers` is a comma-delimited list of all required approvers. An approver can either be a user or an org team. (*Note: Required approvers must have the ability to be set as approvers in the repository. If you add an approver that doesn't have this permission then you would receive an HTTP/402 Validation Failed error when running this action*)
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* `minimum-approvals` is an integer that sets the minimum number of approvals required to progress the workflow. Defaults to ALL approvers.
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* `issue-title` is a string that will be used as the title of the approval-issue.
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* `issue-body` is a string that will be added as comments on the approval-issue.
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* `issue-body-file-path` is a string that is the file path, this file's content will be added as comments on the approval-issue. If both issue-body and issue-body-file-path are given, then the file contents are considered for issue comments.
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* `exclude-workflow-initiator-as-approver` is a boolean that indicates if the workflow initiator (determined by the `GITHUB_ACTOR` environment variable) should be filtered from the final list of approvers. This is optional and defaults to `false`. Set this to `true` to prevent users in the `approvers` list from being able to self-approve workflows.
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* `fail-on-denial` is a boolean that indicates if the workflow should fail if any approver denies the approval. This is optional and defaults to `true`. Set this to `false` to allow the workflow to continue if any approver denies the approval.
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* `additional-approved-words` is a comma separated list of strings to expand the dictionary of words that indicate approval. This is optional and defaults to an empty string.
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* `additional-denied-words` is a comma separated list of strings to expand the dictionary of words that indicate denial. This is optional and defaults to an empty string.
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* `polling-interval-seconds` is an integer that sets the number of seconds to wait between polling the StackitGit API for approval status. This is optional and defaults to `10` seconds. Increase this value if you want to reduce API calls, or decrease it for faster response times.
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> [!Note]
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> 1. If You are using issue-body-file-path then please make sure the file is reachable; for example, if the file is in your repo, then please checkout to your repo in the same job as the approval issue.
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> 2. When using issue-body, the content string is passed as an arguent which is limited by StackitGit at 10kb. For content >= 10kb, use files for passing the issue body.
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> [!CAUTION]
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> When using a file please make sure that the file size remains under 125 KB (a safe limit, to stay under the threshold). If the file size is huge, then the file content will be broken into multiple chunks, each representing an issue comment. With this many API requests the API rate limit is exceeded, and the actions will be temporarily blocked, resulting in an error message like: `403 You have exceeded a secondary rate limit and have been temporarily blocked from content creation. Please retry your request again later.`
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>
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> 5 MB is a crude estimate, as secondary rate limits apply to a user, so your user (usually the bot using an app token for authentication) will not be able to do anything for some time. Primary limits might still reset quickly, but secondary limits will need some cool-off time.
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The file method works unless the file itself is so big that after breaking it into chunks of 65k characters, it exceeds the API limit.
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### Outputs
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* `approval-status` is a string that indicates the final status of the approval. This will be either `approved` or `denied`.
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### Creating Issues in a different repository
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```yaml
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steps:
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- uses: https://stackit.git.onstackit.cloud/actions/manual-approval@v1
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with:
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secret: ${{ github.TOKEN }}
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approvers: user1,user2,org-team1
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minimum-approvals: 1
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issue-title: "Deploying v1.3.5 to prod from staging"
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issue-body: "Please approve or deny the deployment of version v1.3.5."
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exclude-workflow-initiator-as-approver: false
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additional-approved-words: ''
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additional-denied-words: ''
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target-repository: repository-name
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target-repository-owner: owner-id
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```
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- If either of `target-repository` or `target-repository-owner` is missing or is an empty string, then the issue will be created in the same repository where this step is used.
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### Using Custom Words
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StackitGit has a rich library of emojis, and these all work in additional approved words or denied words. Some values StackitGit will store in their text version - i.e. `:shipit:`. Other emojis, StackitGit will store in their Unicode emoji form, like ✅.
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For a seamless experience, it is recommended that you add the custom words to a StackitGit comment, and then copy it back out of the comment into your actions configuration YAML.
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## Org team approver
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If you want to have `approvers` set to an org team, then you need to take a different approach. The default [StackitGit Actions automatic token](https://docs.github.com/en/actions/security-guides/automatic-token-authentication#permissions-for-the-github_token) does not have the necessary permissions to list out team members. If you would like to use this, then you need to generate a token from a StackitGit App with the correct set of permissions. Apart from this, the StackitGit app will also need the Issue: Read & Write role.
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Create an Organization StackitGit App with **read-only access to organization members**. Once the app is created, add a repo secret with the app ID. In the StackitGit App settings, generate a private key and add that as a secret in the repo as well. You can get the app token by using the [`actions/create-github-app-token`](https://github.com/actions/create-github-app-token) StackitGit Action:
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*Note: The StackitGit App tokens expire after 1 hour, which implies the duration for the approval cannot exceed 60 minutes, or the job will fail due to bad credentials. See [docs](https://docs.github.com/en/rest/apps/apps#create-an-installation-access-token-for-an-app).*
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```yaml
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jobs:
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myjob:
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runs-on: ubuntu-latest
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steps:
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- name: Generate token
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id: generate_token
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uses: actions/create-github-app-token@v2
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with:
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app-id: ${{ secrets.APP_ID }}
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private-key: ${{ secrets.APP_PRIVATE_KEY }}
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- name: Wait for approval
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uses: https://stackit.git.onstackit.cloud/actions/manual-approval@v1
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with:
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secret: ${{ steps.generate_token.outputs.token }}
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approvers: myteam
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minimum-approvals: 1
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```
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## Timeout
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If you'd like to force a timeout of your workflow pause, you can specify `timeout-minutes` at either the [step](https://docs.github.com/en/actions/using-workflows/workflow-syntax-for-github-actions#jobsjob_idstepstimeout-minutes) level or the [job](https://docs.github.com/en/actions/using-workflows/workflow-syntax-for-github-actions#jobsjob_idtimeout-minutes) level.
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> [!Note]
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>
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> The `timeout-minutes` option has been removed from the `manual-approval` inputs, as it did nothing and incorrectly assured users that they were in fact
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> getting timeout behavior. Please use one of the below two approaches instead.
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>
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> If you are currently using `timeout-minutes` as a `manual-approval` input, you may see a warning, but this will not break your action.
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For instance, if you want your manual approval step to timeout after an hour, you could do the following:
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```yaml
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jobs:
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approval:
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steps:
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- uses: https://stackit.git.onstackit.cloud/actions/manual-approval@v1
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timeout-minutes: 60
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# ...
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```
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or
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```yaml
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jobs:
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approval:
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timeout-minutes: 10
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steps:
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- uses: https://stackit.git.onstackit.cloud/actions/manual-approval@v1
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```
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## Limitations
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* While the workflow is paused, it will still continue to consume a concurrent job allocation out of the max concurrent job of 20.
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* A paused job is still running compute/instance/virtual machine and will continue to incur costs.
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* Expirations (also mentioned elsewhere in this document):
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* A job (including a paused job) will be failed after 4 hours, and a workflow will be failed after 35 days.
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* StackitGit App tokens expire after 1 hour, which implies the duration for the approval cannot exceed 60 minutes, or the job will fail due to bad credentials.
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