GitHub Action
Cloudflare Pages GitHub Action
GitHub Action for creating Cloudflare Pages deployments, using the new Direct Upload feature and Wrangler integration.
-
Create an API token in the Cloudflare dashboard with the "Cloudflare Pages — Edit" permission.
-
Add that API token as a secret to your GitHub repository,
CLOUDFLARE_API_TOKEN
. -
Create a
.github/workflows/publish.yml
file in your repository:on: [push] jobs: publish: runs-on: ubuntu-latest permissions: contents: read deployments: write name: Publish to Cloudflare Pages steps: - name: Checkout uses: actions/checkout@v3 # Run a build step here if your project requires - name: Publish to Cloudflare Pages uses: cloudflare/pages-action@v1 with: apiToken: ${{ secrets.CLOUDFLARE_API_TOKEN }} accountId: YOUR_ACCOUNT_ID projectName: YOUR_PROJECT_NAME directory: YOUR_ASSET_DIRECTORY # Optional: Enable this if you want to have GitHub Deployments triggered gitHubToken: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
-
Replace
YOUR_ACCOUNT_ID
,YOUR_PROJECT_NAME
andYOUR_ASSET_DIRECTORY
with the appropriate values to your Pages project.
To find your account ID, log in to the Cloudflare dashboard > select your zone in Account Home > find your account ID in Overview under API on the right-side menu. If you have not added a zone, add one by selecting Add site . You can purchase a domain from Cloudflare’s registrar.
If you do not have a zone registered to your account, you can also get your account ID from the pages.dev
URL. E.g: https://dash.cloudflare.com/<ACCOUNT_ID>/pages
To generate an API token:
- Log in to the Cloudflare dashboard.
- Select My Profile from the dropdown menu of your user icon on the top right of your dashboard.
- Select API Tokens > Create Token.
- Under Custom Token, select Get started.
- Name your API Token in the Token name field.
- Under Permissions, select Account, Cloudflare Pages and Edit:
- Select Continue to summary > Create Token.
More information can be found on our guide for making Direct Upload deployments with continous integration.
The branch name is used by Cloudflare Pages to determine if the deployment is production or preview. Read more about git branch build controls.
If you are in a Git workspace, Wrangler will automatically pull the branch information for you. You can override this
manually by adding the argument branch: YOUR_BRANCH_NAME
.
By default Wrangler will run in the root package directory. If your app lives in a monorepo and you want to run Wrangler from its directory, add workingDirectory: YOUR_PACKAGE_DIRECTORY
.
Name | Description |
---|---|
id |
The ID of the pages deployment |
url |
The URL of the pages deployment |
alias |
The alias if it exists otherwise the deployment URL |
environment |
The environment that was deployed to |