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Building and testing Ruby |
You can create a continuous integration (CI) workflow to build and test your Ruby project. |
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tutorial |
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Build & test Ruby |
{% data reusables.actions.enterprise-github-hosted-runners %}
This guide shows you how to create a continuous integration (CI) workflow that builds and tests a Ruby application. If your CI tests pass, you may want to deploy your code or publish a gem.
We recommend that you have a basic understanding of Ruby, YAML, workflow configuration options, and how to create a workflow file. For more information, see:
{% data reusables.actions.workflow-templates-get-started %}
{% data variables.product.prodname_dotcom %} provides a workflow template for Ruby that should work for most Ruby projects. The subsequent sections of this guide give examples of how you can customize this workflow template.
{% data reusables.repositories.navigate-to-repo %} {% data reusables.repositories.actions-tab %} {% data reusables.actions.new-starter-workflow %}
- The "Choose a workflow" page shows a selection of recommended workflow templates. Search for "ruby".
- Filter the selection of workflows by clicking Continuous integration.
- On the "Ruby" workflow, click Configure.
{%- ifversion ghes %}
If you don't find the "Ruby" workflow template, copy the following workflow code to a new file called ruby.yml
in the .github/workflows
directory of your repository.
name: Ruby
on:
push:
branches: [ "main" ]
pull_request:
branches: [ "main" ]
permissions:
contents: read
jobs:
test:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
strategy:
matrix:
ruby-version: ['2.6', '2.7', '3.0']
steps:
- uses: {% data reusables.actions.action-checkout %}
- name: Set up Ruby
# To automatically get bug fixes and new Ruby versions for ruby/setup-ruby,
# change this to (see https://github.com/ruby/setup-ruby#versioning):
# uses: ruby/setup-ruby@v1
uses: ruby/setup-ruby@55283cc23133118229fd3f97f9336ee23a179fcf # v1.146.0
with:
ruby-version: {% raw %}${{ matrix.ruby-version }}{% endraw %}
bundler-cache: true # runs 'bundle install' and caches installed gems automatically
- name: Run tests
run: bundle exec rake
{%- endif %}
-
Edit the workflow as required. For example, change the Ruby versions you want to use.
{% indented_data_reference reusables.actions.third-party-actions spaces=3 %}
-
Click Commit changes.
{% ifversion fpt or ghec %}
The ruby.yml
workflow file is added to the .github/workflows
directory of your repository.
{% endif %}
The easiest way to specify a Ruby version is by using the ruby/setup-ruby
action provided by the Ruby organization on GitHub. The action adds any supported Ruby version to PATH
for each job run in a workflow. For more information and available Ruby versions, see ruby/setup-ruby
.
Using Ruby's ruby/setup-ruby
action is the recommended way of using Ruby with GitHub Actions because it ensures consistent behavior across different runners and different versions of Ruby.
The setup-ruby
action takes a Ruby version as an input and configures that version on the runner.
steps:
- uses: {% data reusables.actions.action-checkout %}
- uses: ruby/setup-ruby@ec02537da5712d66d4d50a0f33b7eb52773b5ed1
with:
ruby-version: '3.1' # Not needed with a .ruby-version file
- run: bundle install
- run: bundle exec rake
Alternatively, you can check a .ruby-version
file into the root of your repository and setup-ruby
will use the version defined in that file.
You can add a matrix strategy to run your workflow with more than one version of Ruby. For example, you can test your code against the latest patch releases of versions 3.1, 3.0, and 2.7.
{% raw %}
strategy:
matrix:
ruby-version: ['3.1', '3.0', '2.7']
{% endraw %}
Each version of Ruby specified in the ruby-version
array creates a job that runs the same steps. The {% raw %}${{ matrix.ruby-version }}
{% endraw %} context is used to access the current job's version. For more information about matrix strategies and contexts, see AUTOTITLE and AUTOTITLE.
The full updated workflow with a matrix strategy could look like this:
{% data reusables.actions.actions-not-certified-by-github-comment %}
{% data reusables.actions.actions-use-sha-pinning-comment %}
name: Ruby CI
on:
push:
branches: [ main ]
pull_request:
branches: [ main ]
jobs:
test:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
strategy:
matrix:
ruby-version: ['3.1', '3.0', '2.7']
steps:
- uses: {% data reusables.actions.action-checkout %}
- name: {% raw %}Set up Ruby ${{ matrix.ruby-version }}{% endraw %}
uses: ruby/setup-ruby@ec02537da5712d66d4d50a0f33b7eb52773b5ed1
with:
ruby-version: {% raw %}${{ matrix.ruby-version }}{% endraw %}
- name: Install dependencies
run: bundle install
- name: Run tests
run: bundle exec rake
The setup-ruby
action will automatically install bundler for you. The version is determined by your gemfile.lock
file. If no version is present in your lockfile, then the latest compatible version will be installed.
steps:
- uses: {% data reusables.actions.action-checkout %}
- uses: ruby/setup-ruby@ec02537da5712d66d4d50a0f33b7eb52773b5ed1
with:
ruby-version: '3.1'
- run: bundle install
The setup-ruby
actions provides a method to automatically handle the caching of your gems between runs.
To enable caching, set the following.
{% raw %}
steps:
- uses: ruby/setup-ruby@ec02537da5712d66d4d50a0f33b7eb52773b5ed1
with:
bundler-cache: true
{% endraw %}
This will configure bundler to install your gems to vendor/cache
. For each successful run of your workflow, this folder will be cached by {% data variables.product.prodname_actions %} and re-downloaded for subsequent workflow runs. A hash of your gemfile.lock
and the Ruby version are used as the cache key. If you install any new gems, or change a version, the cache will be invalidated and bundler will do a fresh install.
Caching without setup-ruby
For greater control over caching, you can use the actions/cache
action directly. For more information, see AUTOTITLE.
steps:
- uses: {% data reusables.actions.action-cache %}
with:
path: vendor/bundle
key: {% raw %}${{ runner.os }}-gems-${{ hashFiles('**/Gemfile.lock') }}{% endraw %}
restore-keys: |
{% raw %}${{ runner.os }}-gems-{% endraw %}
- name: Bundle install
run: |
bundle config path vendor/bundle
bundle install --jobs 4 --retry 3
If you're using a matrix build, you will want to include the matrix variables in your cache key. For example, if you have a matrix strategy for different ruby versions (matrix.ruby-version
) and different operating systems (matrix.os
), your workflow steps might look like this:
steps:
- uses: {% data reusables.actions.action-cache %}
with:
path: vendor/bundle
key: {% raw %}bundle-use-ruby-${{ matrix.os }}-${{ matrix.ruby-version }}-${{ hashFiles('**/Gemfile.lock') }}{% endraw %}
restore-keys: |
{% raw %}bundle-use-ruby-${{ matrix.os }}-${{ matrix.ruby-version }}-{% endraw %}
- name: Bundle install
run: |
bundle config path vendor/bundle
bundle install --jobs 4 --retry 3
The following example matrix tests all stable releases and head versions of MRI, JRuby and TruffleRuby on Ubuntu and macOS.
{% data reusables.actions.actions-not-certified-by-github-comment %}
{% data reusables.actions.actions-use-sha-pinning-comment %}
name: Matrix Testing
on:
push:
branches: [ main ]
pull_request:
branches: [ main ]
jobs:
test:
runs-on: {% raw %}${{ matrix.os }}-latest{% endraw %}
strategy:
fail-fast: false
matrix:
os: [ubuntu, macos]
ruby: [2.5, 2.6, 2.7, head, debug, jruby, jruby-head, truffleruby, truffleruby-head]
continue-on-error: {% raw %}${{ endsWith(matrix.ruby, 'head') || matrix.ruby == 'debug' }}{% endraw %}
steps:
- uses: {% data reusables.actions.action-checkout %}
- uses: ruby/setup-ruby@ec02537da5712d66d4d50a0f33b7eb52773b5ed1
with:
ruby-version: {% raw %}${{ matrix.ruby }}{% endraw %}
- run: bundle install
- run: bundle exec rake
The following example installs rubocop
and uses it to lint all files. For more information, see RuboCop. You can configure Rubocop to decide on the specific linting rules.
{% data reusables.actions.actions-not-certified-by-github-comment %}
{% data reusables.actions.actions-use-sha-pinning-comment %}
name: Linting
on: [push]
jobs:
test:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- uses: {% data reusables.actions.action-checkout %}
- uses: ruby/setup-ruby@ec02537da5712d66d4d50a0f33b7eb52773b5ed1
with:
ruby-version: '2.6'
- run: bundle install
- name: Rubocop
run: rubocop -f github
Specifying -f github
means that the RuboCop output will be in {% data variables.product.prodname_dotcom %}'s annotation format. Any linting errors will show inline in the Files changed tab of the pull request that introduces them.
You can configure your workflow to publish your Ruby package to any package registry you'd like when your CI tests pass.
You can store any access tokens or credentials needed to publish your package using repository secrets. The following example creates and publishes a package to GitHub Package Registry
and RubyGems
.
{% data reusables.actions.actions-not-certified-by-github-comment %}
{% data reusables.actions.actions-use-sha-pinning-comment %}
name: Ruby Gem
on:
# Manually publish
workflow_dispatch:
# Alternatively, publish whenever changes are merged to the `main` branch.
push:
branches: [ main ]
pull_request:
branches: [ main ]
jobs:
build:
name: Build + Publish
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
permissions:
packages: write
contents: read
steps:
- uses: {% data reusables.actions.action-checkout %}
- name: Set up Ruby 2.6
uses: ruby/setup-ruby@ec02537da5712d66d4d50a0f33b7eb52773b5ed1
with:
ruby-version: '2.6'
- run: bundle install
- name: Publish to GPR
run: |{% raw %}
mkdir -p $HOME/.gem
touch $HOME/.gem/credentials
chmod 0600 $HOME/.gem/credentials
printf -- "---\n:github: ${GEM_HOST_API_KEY}\n" > $HOME/.gem/credentials
gem build *.gemspec
gem push --KEY github --host https://rubygems.pkg.github.com/${OWNER} *.gem
env:
GEM_HOST_API_KEY: "Bearer ${{secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN}}"
OWNER: ${{ github.repository_owner }}
- name: Publish to RubyGems
run: |
mkdir -p $HOME/.gem
touch $HOME/.gem/credentials
chmod 0600 $HOME/.gem/credentials
printf -- "---\n:rubygems_api_key: ${GEM_HOST_API_KEY}\n" > $HOME/.gem/credentials
gem build *.gemspec
gem push *.gem
env:
GEM_HOST_API_KEY: "${{secrets.RUBYGEMS_AUTH_TOKEN}}"{% endraw %}