Using Docker with Github Actions
Overview
Teaching: 30 min
Exercises: 0 minQuestions
How do I use Docker from Github Actions?
Objectives
Generate Github.io pages using Pandoc
Raise awareness of how Docker can be used in cloud services
This lesson can be taught as a replacement of the episode “Containers on the Cloud”. Participants should have experience working with
git
and Github.
Docker has become an industry standard in providing run-time environments to cloud services. This lesson shows how you can use Docker images inside Github Actions. Our specific example will show a neat way to build a simple website that goes with any project you might have going.
Github Actions
Github Actions are a means of automating repetitive task in maintaining software projects:
- Testing if your software works correctly (Continuous Integration)
- Building components for distribution to your users (Continuous Deployment)
- Building documentation
These are tasks that you could do on your own computer, but consider the following cases:
- Your software works on your computer, but you forgot to mention this one crucial package for correct operation.
- Your software used to work, but since the last update something broke.
- Someone else contributed to your package but didn’t run the same version of the document converter: the documentation looks different now.
These are just some of the bad things that may happen. To address these issues, it is often desirable to have a consistent, controlled environment in which to run these tasks, collectively known as CI/CD. Github can perform these actions for you inside Docker containers. If your project is open source, this service is entirely free of charge. Competing platforms have similar services for which the syntax may vary slightly, but they are all grounded in the use of some form of containers (Docker or otherwise). We will demonstrate the use of a Docker container in deploying a small website presenting a Github project.
Building Github.io pages with Pandoc
Suppose you have a Github project with a README and would like to turn it into HTML for a Github.io page. A common problem in documenting and testing software is to keep relevant content in a single location. In a Github project this location is the README, however it will look a lot more professional if you also have a custom website where people can find downloads, documentation etc. This website could become part of a larger portfolio of all your projects on Github.
It would be nice if such a page was updated automatically every time you update other parts of the project.
A fabulous tool for building web content from Markdown files is Pandoc. You could call it the swiss army knife of document conversion: it is very, very versatile. In this instance we will only use its most basic operation. (If you are familiar with RMarkdown: Pandoc is what powers RMarkdown).
Why Pandoc?
There are other engines that can do this for you, but here are some features that win some people over:
- Supports citations (from BibTeX or CSL database)
- Rendered equations (using MathJax, optionally numbered)
- Code highlighting
- Highly customizable
We take you through the process of creating a project on Github from scratch and
convert the README to HTML and upload it to a separate gh-pages
branch. First let’s take a look at
what the end product will look like. We have a project (example
here) with a main
branch that includes a README.
We can use Pandoc to turn this README into a simple static website.
If we switch to gh-pages
branch in Github we can see where this page is hosted.
Only a index.html
and .nojekyll
(that prevents Github from creating a Jekyll page). So how do we
set this up?
Create a Github Project
Create a github project with a short README.md
. To do this:
- go to
github.com
and make sure you’re logged in - click the green “New” button at the top right
- clone the new project to your computer. The instructions for doing so will be shown in the dialog on Github, or you can also see Software Carpentry lesson on Version Control with Git, or the example below:
git clone <your-repo-url>
cd <repo-name>
Using Pandoc to Create a Website
Now that we have cloned the repository we can generate the HTML locally using Pandoc.
Pandoc is a universal document converter. It reads and writes between very many different file formats, including many flavours of Markdown, HTML, LaTeX, Word, RTF, rst and many more. We use it to generate static websites from Markdown.
First, let’s download a container with pandoc installed and run it to see what the pandoc version is.
docker container run pandoc/core --version
Unable to find image 'pandoc/core:latest' locally
latest: Pulling from pandoc/core
f84cab65f19f: Pull complete
f95e84a31132: Pull complete
5d5ebbd90555: Pull complete
d084fb969d20: Pull complete
Digest: sha256:af1d118e3280ffaf6181af5a9f87ef0c010af9b5877053b750be33d0c47cc6ce
Status: Downloaded newer image for pandoc/core:latest
pandoc 2.12
Compiled with pandoc-types 1.22, texmath 0.12.1.1, skylighting 0.10.4,
citeproc 0.3.0.8, ipynb 0.1.0.1
User data directory: /root/.local/share/pandoc
Copyright (C) 2006-2021 John MacFarlane. Web: https://pandoc.org
This is free software; see the source for copying conditions. There is no
warranty, not even for merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose.
Now, we can run pandoc on our README.md
file by including our current directory and
the README.md
file as part of the docker container run
command:
docker container run --mount type=bind,source=${PWD},target=/tmp pandoc/core /tmp/README.md
<h1 id="readme-pages">readme-pages</h1>
<p>Example for generating Github.io pages from Readme with Pandoc.</p>
Here, the --mount type=bind,source=${PWD},target=/tmp
flag says to take the directory at ${PWD}
and make it available inside the
container as /tmp
. Then pandoc
can read the source file (README.md
) and convert it to HTML. While this HTML
is valid, it doesn’t show the complete structure of a standalone HTML document. For that we need to
add the --standalone
argument to the pandoc command. Also we can redirect the output to create a HTML file in the
build
directory.
mkdir -p build
docker container run --mount type=bind,source=${PWD},target=/tmp pandoc/core /tmp/README.md --standalone --output=/tmp/build/index.html
[WARNING] This document format requires a nonempty <title> element.
Defaulting to 'README' as the title.
To specify a title, use 'title' in metadata or --metadata title="...".
To suppress the warning message we may add the following lines at the top of the README.md
file:
---
title: Hello, Pandoc
---
Or add the mentioned --metadata title="..."
to the command line.
Once we’ve made all of these changes, and produced the output we want, we can check it, using this command:
cat build/index.html
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" lang="" xml:lang="">
<head>
<meta charset="utf-8" />
... etc
We now have tested our website deployment workflow - given the source files from Github, we can use a Docker container and command to generate our website. We now want to automate this process via Github Actions.
Automating Deployment on Github Actions
Github Actions is a cloud service for automating continuous integration and deployment. This means
we can have Github build our website and publish it on github.io
automatically at every commit.
Go to the Github project page you created earlier and click on “Actions”. Because we have no active workflows yet, we are taken immediately to a menu for creating a new one. We will skip the templates and click on “set up a workflow yourself”. The configuration format is YAML.
The first entry is the name of the workflow
name: Deploy pages
Next we specify when this workflow is run. In this case: every time content is pushed to the
main
branch
on:
push:
branches:
- main
Now we tell Github what to do.
jobs:
deploy: # a free machine-readable name for this job
runs-on: ubuntu-latest # specify the base operating system
steps:
- name: Checkout repo content # fetch the contents of the repository
uses: actions/checkout@v2
- name: Prepare build environment
run: | # multiple Bash commands follow
mkdir -p build
touch build/.nojekyll
Now for the Docker bit:
- name: Run pandoc
uses: docker://pandoc/core:2.12 # Always specify a version!
with:
args: >- # multi-line argument
--standalone
--output=build/index.html
README.md
- name: Deploy on github pages # Use a third-party plugin to upload the content
uses: JamesIves/github-pages-deploy-action@4.1.0
with:
branch: gh-pages
folder: build
We may recognize the command-line that we had previously. Notice that we don’t need to specify the
--mount
flag. Github Actions arranges the Docker environment such that the files are in the correct
location. The last step uploads the build
directory to the gh-pages
branch.
Now we should enable Github Pages on this repository: go to the “Settings” tab and scroll down to
“GitHub Pages”. There we select the root folder in the gh-pages
branch. After a few (tens) of
seconds the page should be up.
Reference material
- Pandoc the universal document converter
- Documentation on GitHub Actions
- GitHub Pages deploy action
- Pandoc action example
Key Points
You can call any Docker image from a Github action