Nota: Los ejecutores hospedados en GitHub no son compatibles con GitHub Enterprise Server actualmente. Puedes encontrar más información sobre el soporte que se tiene planeado en el futuro en el Itinerario público de GitHub.
Introduction
This guide shows you how to use PowerShell for CI. It describes how to use Pester, install dependencies, test your module, and publish to the PowerShell Gallery.
GitHub-hosted runners have a tools cache with pre-installed software, which includes PowerShell and Pester.
For a full list of up-to-date software and the pre-installed versions of PowerShell and Pester, see "Specifications for GitHub-hosted runners".
Prerequisites
You should be familiar with YAML and the syntax for GitHub Actions. For more information, see "Learn GitHub Actions."
We recommend that you have a basic understanding of PowerShell and Pester. For more information, see:
Utilizar ejecutores auto-hospedados en GitHub Enterprise Server
Cuando utilices acciones de configuración, (tales como actions/setup-LANGUAGE) en GitHub Enterprise Server con ejecutores auto-hospedados, tal vez necesites configurar el caché de las herramientas en los ejecutores que no tienen acceso a internet. Para obtener más información, consulta la sección " Configurar el caché de herramientas en ejecutores auto-hospedados sin acceso a internet".
Adding a workflow for Pester
To automate your testing with PowerShell and Pester, you can add a workflow that runs every time a change is pushed to your repository. In the following example, Test-Path is used to check that a file called resultsfile.log is present.
This example workflow file must be added to your repository's .github/workflows/ directory:
name: Test PowerShell on Ubuntu on: push jobs: pester-test: name: Pester test runs-on: ubuntu-latest steps: - name: Check out repository code uses: actions/checkout@v2 - name: Perform a Pester test from the command-line shell: pwsh run: Test-Path resultsfile.log | Should -Be $true - name: Perform a Pester test from the Tests.ps1 file shell: pwsh run: | Invoke-Pester Unit.Tests.ps1 -Passthru -
shell: pwsh- Configures the job to use PowerShell when running theruncommands. -
run: Test-Path resultsfile.log- Check whether a file calledresultsfile.logis present in the repository's root directory. -
Should -Be $true- Uses Pester to define an expected result. If the result is unexpected, then GitHub Actions flags this as a failed test. For example:
Invoke-Pester Unit.Tests.ps1 -Passthru- Uses Pester to execute tests defined in a file calledUnit.Tests.ps1. For example, to perform the same test described above, theUnit.Tests.ps1will contain the following:Describe "Check results file is present" { It "Check results file is present" { Test-Path resultsfile.log | Should -Be $true } }
PowerShell module locations
The table below describes the locations for various PowerShell modules in each GitHub-hosted runner.
| Ubuntu | macOS | Windows | |
|---|---|---|---|
| PowerShell system modules | /opt/microsoft/powershell/7/Modules/* | /usr/local/microsoft/powershell/7/Modules/* | C:\program files\powershell\7\Modules\* |
| PowerShell add-on modules | /usr/local/share/powershell/Modules/* | /usr/local/share/powershell/Modules/* | C:\Modules\* |
| User-installed modules | /home/runner/.local/share/powershell/Modules/* | /Users/runner/.local/share/powershell/Modules/* | C:\Users\runneradmin\Documents\PowerShell\Modules\* |
Installing dependencies
GitHub-hosted runners have PowerShell 7 and Pester installed. You can use Install-Module to install additional dependencies from the PowerShell Gallery before building and testing your code.
Note: The pre-installed packages (such as Pester) used by GitHub-hosted runners are regularly updated, and can introduce significant changes. As a result, it is recommended that you always specify the required package versions by using Install-Module with -MaximumVersion.
For example, the following job installs the SqlServer and PSScriptAnalyzer modules:
jobs: install-dependencies: name: Install dependencies runs-on: ubuntu-latest steps: - uses: actions/checkout@v2 - name: Install from PSGallery shell: pwsh run: | Set-PSRepository PSGallery -InstallationPolicy Trusted Install-Module SqlServer, PSScriptAnalyzer Note: By default, no repositories are trusted by PowerShell. When installing modules from the PowerShell Gallery, you must explicitly set the installation policy for PSGallery to Trusted.
Testing your code
You can use the same commands that you use locally to build and test your code.
Using PSScriptAnalyzer to lint code
The following example installs PSScriptAnalyzer and uses it to lint all ps1 files in the repository. For more information, see PSScriptAnalyzer on GitHub.
lint-with-PSScriptAnalyzer: name: Install and run PSScriptAnalyzer runs-on: ubuntu-latest steps: - uses: actions/checkout@v2 - name: Install PSScriptAnalyzer module shell: pwsh run: | Set-PSRepository PSGallery -InstallationPolicy Trusted Install-Module PSScriptAnalyzer -ErrorAction Stop - name: Lint with PSScriptAnalyzer shell: pwsh run: | Invoke-ScriptAnalyzer -Path *.ps1 -Recurse -Outvariable issues $errors = $issues.Where({$_.Severity -eq 'Error'}) $warnings = $issues.Where({$_.Severity -eq 'Warning'}) if ($errors) { Write-Error "There were $($errors.Count) errors and $($warnings.Count) warnings total." -ErrorAction Stop } else { Write-Output "There were $($errors.Count) errors and $($warnings.Count) warnings total." } Packaging workflow data as artifacts
You can upload artifacts to view after a workflow completes. For example, you may need to save log files, core dumps, test results, or screenshots. For more information, see "Persisting workflow data using artifacts."
The following example demonstrates how you can use the upload-artifact action to archive the test results received from Invoke-Pester. For more information, see the upload-artifact action.
name: Upload artifact from Ubuntu on: [push] jobs: upload-pester-results: name: Run Pester and upload results runs-on: ubuntu-latest steps: - uses: actions/checkout@v2 - name: Test with Pester shell: pwsh run: Invoke-Pester Unit.Tests.ps1 -Passthru | Export-CliXml -Path Unit.Tests.xml - name: Upload test results uses: actions/upload-artifact@v2 with: name: ubuntu-Unit-Tests path: Unit.Tests.xml if: ${{ always() }} The always() function configures the job to continue processing even if there are test failures. For more information, see "always."
Publishing to PowerShell Gallery
You can configure your workflow to publish your PowerShell module to the PowerShell Gallery when your CI tests pass. You can use secrets to store any tokens or credentials needed to publish your package. For more information, see "Creating and using encrypted secrets."
The following example creates a package and uses Publish-Module to publish it to the PowerShell Gallery:
name: Publish PowerShell Module on: release: types: [created] jobs: publish-to-gallery: runs-on: ubuntu-latest steps: - uses: actions/checkout@v2 - name: Build and publish env: NUGET_KEY: ${{ secrets.NUGET_KEY }} shell: pwsh run: | ./build.ps1 -Path /tmp/samplemodule Publish-Module -Path /tmp/samplemodule -NuGetApiKey $env:NUGET_KEY -Verbose