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:: Commands
The core toolkit package offers a number of convenience functions for setting results, logging, registering secrets and exporting variables across actions. Sometimes, however, its useful to be able to do these things in a script or other tool.
To allow this, we provide a special ::
syntax which, if logged to stdout
, will allow the runner to perform special behavior on
your commands. The following commands are all supported:
Set an environment variable
To set an environment variable for future out of process steps, use ::set-env
:
echo ::set-env name=FOO::BAR
Running $FOO
in a future step will now return BAR
This is wrapped by the core exportVariable method which sets for future steps but also updates the variable for this step
export function exportVariable(name: string, val: string): void {}
PATH Manipulation
To prepend a string to PATH, use ::addPath
:
echo ::add-path::BAR
Running $PATH
in a future step will now return BAR:{Previous Path}
;
This is wrapped by the core addPath method:
export function addPath(inputPath: string): void {}
Set outputs
To set an output for the step, use ::set-output
:
echo ::set-output name=FOO::BAR
Running steps.[step-id].outputs.FOO
in your Yaml will now give you BAR
steps:
- name: Set the value
id: step_one
run: echo ::set-output name=FOO::BAR
- name: Use it
run: echo ${{ steps.step_one.outputs.FOO }}
This is wrapped by the core setOutput method:
export function setOutput(name: string, value: string): void {}
Register a secret
If a script or action does work to create a secret at runtime, it can be registered with the runner to be masked in logs.
To mask a value in the logs, use ::set-secret
:
echo ::set-secret::BAR
This is wrapped by the core method which both sets the value as a variable for future steps and registers the secret to mask
function exportSecret(name: string, val: string): void {}
Now, future logs containing BAR will be masked. E.g. running echo "Hello FOO BAR World"
will now print Hello FOO **** World
.
CAUTION: Do not mask short values if you can avoid it, it could render your output unreadable (and future steps' output as well).
For example, if you mask the letter l
, running echo "Hello FOO BAR World"
will now print He*********o FOO BAR Wor****d
Group and Ungroup Log Lines
Emitting a group with a title will instruct the logs to create a collapsable region up to the next ungroup command.
echo ::group::my title
echo ::ungroup::
This is wrapped by the core methods:
function startGroup(name: string): void {}
function endGroup(): void {}
Log Level
Finally, there are several commands to emit different levels of log output:
log level | example usage |
---|---|
debug | echo ::debug::My debug message |
warning | echo ::warning::My warning message |
error | echo ::error::My error message |