π AWS Amplify CLI support for github actions. This action supports configuring and deploying your project to AWS as well as creating and undeploying amplify environments.
You can include the action in your workflow as actions/amplify-cli-action@v0.2.1
. Example (configuring amplify, building and deploying):
name: 'Amplify Deploy'
on: [push]
jobs:
test:
name: test amplify-cli-action
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
strategy:
matrix:
node-version: [10.x]
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v1
- name: use node.js ${{ matrix.node-version }}
uses: actions/setup-node@v1
with:
node-version: ${{ matrix.node-version }}
- name: configure amplify
uses: ambientlight/amplify-cli-action@0.2.1
with:
amplify_command: configure
amplify_env: prod
env:
AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID: ${{ secrets.AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID }}
AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY: ${{ secrets.AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY }}
AWS_REGION: us-east-1
- name: install, build and test
run: |
npm install
# build and test
# npm run build
# npm run test
- name: deploy
uses: ambientlight/amplify-cli-action@0.2.1
with:
amplify_command: publish
amplify_env: prod
env:
AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID: ${{ secrets.AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID }}
AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY: ${{ secrets.AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY }}
AWS_REGION: us-east-1
You are required to provide amplify_command
and amplify_env
input parameters (with section of your workflow) as well as AWS credentials and aws region: AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID, AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY, AWS_REGION environment variables that should be stored as repo secrets. You can learn more about setting environment variables with Github action here.
I would personally discourage using AdministratorAccess
IAM policy or root account credentials for AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID, AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY here. Instead, consider creating a designated AWS IAM user for this step with permissions restricted to AWS resources associated with amplify category resources used. This can get tricky since in addition to AWS CloudFormation permissions, IAM user who creates or delete stacks require additional permissions that depends on the stack templates. For example, if you have a template that describes an Amazon DynamoDB Table (in amplify storage category), IAM user must have the corresponding permissions for Amazon DynamoDB actions to successfully create the stack. Nonetheless, next steps guide you through creation of IAM user for this step.
- Navigate to AWS Identity and Access Management console
- Under Users ->
Add New User
. Fill in the user name(GithubCI
) and setProgrammatic Access
for Access type. - In permissions, select
Create a new group
, in a dropdown selectCreate policy
. - In a policy creation menu, select
JSON
tab and fill it with a next policy statement, then hit review and save:
{
"Version": "2012-10-17",
"Statement": [
{
"Effect": "Allow",
"Action": [
"cloudformation:CreateUploadBucket",
"cloudformation:DescribeStackResource",
"cloudformation:UpdateStackSet",
"cloudformation:DescribeStackEvents",
"cloudformation:UpdateStack",
"cloudformation:CreateStackSet",
"cloudformation:DescribeStackResources",
"cloudformation:DeleteStackSet",
"cloudformation:DescribeStacks",
"cloudformation:CreateStack",
"cloudformation:DeleteStack"
],
"Resource": "*"
},
{
"Effect": "Allow",
"Action": [
"iam:CreateRole",
"iam:GetRole",
"iam:PassRole",
"iam:PutRolePolicy",
"iam:GetPolicy",
"iam:DeleteRole",
"iam:DeleteRolePolicy",
"iam:CreatePolicy",
"iam:UpdateRole",
"iam:GetRolePolicy"
],
"Resource": "*"
},
{
"Effect": "Allow",
"Action": [
"s3:CreateBucket",
"s3:PutObject",
"s3:GetObject"
],
"Resource": "*"
},
{
"Effect": "Allow",
"Action": [
"dynamodb:*",
"cloudfront:*",
"cognito-identity:*",
"s3:*",
"appsync:*",
"lambda:*",
"cognito-idp:*"
],
"Resource": "*"
}
]
}
The first 3 policy statement blocks contain neccessary IAM permissions for Amplify CloudFormation deployments to work, while the last one contains permissions corresponding to AWS resources that are commonly used in Amplify (as an example): auth
, api
, hosting
, storage
, function
. You will most likely NEED TO ADD more permissions corresponding to other resources used in your project. You may further constraint it down to specific service actions, but this can be a bit annoying as it is not clear and obvious what permissions(wasn't able to find cloudformation docs that list permissions needed to create/update/remove resources for given service) you will need for a given amplify category resource, most likely you will find yourself iteratively deploying while tweaking IAM permissions until deployment succeeds.
- In the previous page group creation dropdown, find a newly created policy in the list, add a name (
AmplifyDeploy
) and click on Create Group. - Select a newly created group for this new user, click through the other steps and finish creating a new user.
- Copy the access key and secret access key into your github repository Secrets (in repo's Settings) as AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID, AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY.
- You can also learn more at Controlling Access with AWS Identity and Access Management
type: string
values: configure | push | publish | status | add_env | delete_env
required parameters: amplify_env
Configures amplify and initializes specified amplify environment, which is required to exist prior to running this command.
Perform cloudformation deployment of your latest amplify updates. You are required to run this step with configure
command prior to running this.
Note #0: this won't additionally build and deploy your front-end artifacts. Use publish for this.
Note #1: don't forget to run amplify env pull
locally to synchronize the stacks status aftwards
Perform cloudformation deployment of your latest amplify updates as well as front-end artifacts if hosting category is used in your project. You are required to run this step with configure
command prior to running this.
Note: don't forget to run amplify env pull
locally to synchronize the stacks status aftwards
Shows the state of local resources not yet pushed to the cloud (Create/Update/Delete). You are required to run this step with configure
command prior to running this.
required parameters: amplify_env
Creates and initialized a new amplify environment. You would likely need this if you want to create a full replica of production environment for running integration tests (Refer to Replicating Environment for Integration Tests). IMPORTANT: make sure to always run this step together with delete_env command since this new environment won't be added to your project's configuration and you would need to manually delete the leftover cloudformation stack and S3 bucket otherwise.
Note #0: you need to specify custom amplify_cli_version
: 3.17.1-alpha.35
that fixes headless push bug before 3.17.1
is released.
Note #1: WILL FAIL with resource already exists
exception if you repeatedly populate the environment that you have undeployed previously WHEN you are using storage category in your project and its CF AWS::S3::Bucket
resource has Retain DeletionPolicy
, since delete_env
step won't remove such S3 bucket.
Note #2: may take significant time if you are utilizing AWS CloudFront
in your hosting category.
required parameters: amplify_env, delete_lock
Undeploys cloudformation stack(removes all resources) for a selected amplify environment. To prevent accidental deletion, you are required to explicitly set delete_lock input parameter with false
. For the same reason, this step will fail if you try running it on the enivonment with name containing prod/release/master
.
Note #0: results in leftover amplify environment S3 bucket since amplify env delete
won't remove this S3 bucket. (this will not affect repeated population of the environment with the same name as new population will create S3 bucket with different name)
Note #1: repeated population of environment with the same name WILL FAIL with resource already exists
exception if you repeatedly populate the environment that you have undeployed previously WHEN you are using storage category in your project and its CF AWS::S3::Bucket
resource has Retain DeletionPolicy
, since delete_env
step won't remove such S3 bucket.
Note #2: may take significant time if you are utilizing AWS CloudFront
in your hosting category.
type: string
required: YES
for amplify_commands: configure, add_env, delete_env
.
Name of amplify environment used in this step.
type: string
required NO
Use custom amplify version instead of latest stable (npm's @latest
) when parameter is not specified.
type: string
required: NO
the root amplify project directory (contains /amplify
): use it if you amplify project is not this repo root directory.
type: bool
required YES
for delete_env
amplify_command
default: true
deletion protection: explicitly set this to false if you want delete_env
step to work.
type: string
required NO
additional arguments to pass to ampify_command's defined command
You may soon find the need of running fully-fledged tests that would test the actual API calls and other functionality available in your infrustructure rather their mocked counterparts. This is achieved in the next example by means of populating the new amplify environment, running all the necessary tests and undeploying amplify environment back. PR branch name is used for environment name. Please note that subsequent commits to PR branch may fail with resource already exist
if your amplify category resources use DeletionPolicy in its CF templates that is set to Retain
.
Also note, each deployment results in leftover amplify environment S3 bucket (named amplify-{PROJECT_NAME}-{ENV_NAME}-{ID}-deployment
) since amplify env delete
won't remove this S3 bucket. (this will not affect repeated population of the environment with the same name as new population will create S3 bucket with different name)
name: 'Integration Tests'
on: [pull_request]
jobs:
test:
name: test amplify-cli-action
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
strategy:
matrix:
node-version: [10.x]
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v1
- name: use node.js ${{ matrix.node-version }}
uses: actions/setup-node@v1
with:
node-version: ${{ matrix.node-version }}
- name: set amplify env name
id: setenvname
run: |
# use GITHUB_HEAD_REF that is set to PR source branch
# also remove -_ from branch name and limit length to 10 for amplify env restriction
echo "##[set-output name=amplifyenvname;]$(echo ${GITHUB_HEAD_REF//[-_]/} | cut -c-10)"
- name: deploy test environment
uses: ambientlight/amplify-cli-action@v0.2.1
with:
amplify_command: add_env
amplify_env: ${{ steps.setenvname.outputs.amplifyenvname }}
amplify_cli_version: '3.17.1-alpha.35'
env:
AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID: ${{ secrets.AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID }}
AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY: ${{ secrets.AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY }}
AWS_REGION: us-east-1
- name: install, build and run integration tests
run: |
# build and test
# npm install
# npm run build
# npm run test
- name: undeploy test environment
uses: ambientlight/amplify-cli-action@v0.2.1
# run even if previous step fails
if: failure() || success()
with:
amplify_command: delete_env
amplify_env: ${{ steps.setenvname.outputs.amplifyenvname }}
amplify_cli_version: '3.17.1-alpha.35'
delete_lock: false
env:
AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID: ${{ secrets.AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID }}
AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY: ${{ secrets.AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY }}
AWS_REGION: us-east-1
As an alternative, one practical way could be to have a fixed sandbox environment that all PRs will update regardless of the branch (and doesn't get undeployed), so it can be used as a playground to manually test and play around with upcoming updates, but kind in mind there can be potential additional costs involved as some AWS resources used in amplify have fixed by-hours costs (kinesis for example).