A GitHub Action to create on-demand preview environments for Laravel apps.
TzviPM/laravel-deploy
is a GitHub Action to automatically deploy new Laravel app instances to Laravel Forge using Envoyer, including branching PlanetScale mysql databases. It's perfect for creating PR preview environments that are isolated, publicly accessible (or privately, depending on your server's settings), and closely resemble your production environment, to preview and test your changes.
When you open a PR and this action runs for the first time, it will:
- Create a new site on Forge with a unique subdomain.
- Create a new project on Envoyer linked to the Forge site and install your Laravel app into it.
- Create a new branch in PlanetScale for the site and configure your app to use it.
- Create and install an SSL certificate and comment on your PR with a link to the site.
- Set up a scheduled job in Forge to run your site's scheduler.
- Enable push-to-deploy on the site so that it updates automatically when you push new code.
Before adding this action to your workflows, make sure you have:
- A Laravel Forge app server.
- A wildcard subdomain DNS record pointing to your Forge server.
- A Forge API token.
- An Envoyer API token.
- A PlanetScale database and Service token.
Warning: This action has direct access to your Laravel Forge, Envoyer, and PlanetScale accounts and should only be used in trusted contexts. Anyone who can push to a GitHub repository using this action will be able to execute code on the connected accounts and servers.
Add your tokens as a Actions Secrets in your GitHub repository. Then, use TzviPM/laravel-deploy
inside any workflow.
For the action to be able to clean up preview sites and other resources after a PR is merged, it has to be triggered on the pull request "closed" event. By default, GitHub's pull_request
event does not trigger a workflow run when its activity type is closed
, so you may need to place this action in its own workflow file that specifies that event type:
# deploy-preview.yml
on:
pull_request:
types: [opened, closed]
jobs:
deploy-preview:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v3
- uses: TzviPM/laravel-deploy@v1
with:
forge-token: ${{ secrets.FORGE_TOKEN }}
envoyer-token: ${{ secrets.ENVOYER_TOKEN }}
pscale-token-id: ${{ secrets.PSCALE_TOKEN_ID }}
pscale-token: ${{ secrets.PSCALE_TOKEN }}
pscale-organization: myorg
pscale-database: abc_db
project: My Org Portal
php-version: php81
environment: |
APP_NAME="My Org Portal"
servers: |
abc.myorg.com 60041
branches: |
master main
The forge-token
input parameter accepts your Forge API token, which the action uses to communicate with Laravel Forge to create sites and other resources. Store this value in an encrypted secret; do not paste it directly into your workflow file.
The envoyer-token
input parameter accepts your Envoyer API token, which the action uses to communicate with Envoyer to create projects and other resources. Store this value in an encrypted secret; do not paste it directly into your workflow file.
The project
input parameter allows you to specify a friendly name to prefix projects in Envoyer. If not specified, a project name will be auto-generated based on the name of the repository.
The php version to use for the envoyer server. PHP Versions:
Version | Slug |
---|---|
PHP 8.1 | php81 |
PHP 8.0 | php80 |
PHP 7.4 | php74 |
PHP 7.3 | php73 |
PHP 7.2 | php72 |
PHP 7.1 | php71 |
PHP 7.0 | php70 |
PHP 5.6 | php56 |
The pscale-token-id
and pscale-token
input parameters accept your PlanetScale Service API token and id, which the action uses to communicate with PlanetScale to create database branches and other resources. Store this value in an encrypted secret; do not paste it directly into your workflow file.
The pscale-organization
and pscale-database
input parameters accept your PlanetScale organization and database IDs, which the action uses to identify the corresponding resources in PlanetScale. Make sure your API token has been granted access to these resources.
The servers
input parameter accepts a list of Forge servers to deploy to.
Each server must include both a domain name and a server ID, separated by a space. The domain name should be the wildcard subdomain pointing at that server (without the wildcard part). For example, if your wildcard subdomain is *.abc.myorg.com
and your Forge server ID is 60041
, set this input parameter to abc.myorg.com 60041
.
If this input parameter contains multiple lines, each line will be treated as a different Forge server. The action currently only deploys to one server; if you list multiple servers, it will use the first one.
The branches
input parameter accepts a list of mappings from repo branch names to database branch names.
Each mapping must include both a git branch name and a database branch name, separated by a space. The laravel-deploy
action will prioritize these mappings over auto-generated branch names. This can be useful, for example, if your git repository uses master
as its primary branch name, but the planetscale database uses main
.
If this input parameter contains multiple lines, each line will be treated as a separate mapping.
The environment
input parameter allows you to add and update environment variables in the preview site.
This action is based on Jacob Baker-Kretzmar (bakerkretzmar)'s laravel-deploy-preview action. It's written in TypeScript using NestJS and compiled with ncc
into a single JavaScript file.
Run npm run build
to compile a new version of the action for distribution.
To run the action locally, create a .env
file and add your API tokens to it, then run npm run start
.
When releasing a new version of the action, update the major version tag to point to the same commit as the latest patch release. This is what allows users to use TzviPM/laravel-deploy@v1
in their workflows instead of TzviPM/[email protected]
. For example, after tagging and releasing v1.0.2
, delete the v1
tag locally, create it again pointing to the same commit as v1.0.2
, and force push your tags with git push -f --tags
.