Cloudways allows you to deploy your WordPress project (plugin, theme or entire site) from Git using the Cloudways API.
This GitHub Action will deploy your last project changes from GitHub to your Cloudways server.
To use this GitHub Action you need:
- Cloudways account.
- Cloudways API Key.
- Deployment Via Git already configured.
- Cloudways' data stored in your GitHub repository secrets.
Cloudways provides you an easy way to get it in its own platform or read this guide about how to generate it.
Also, you can read this guide to know how to set up your Deployment Via Git functionality in Cloudways.
You can specify the Cloudways' data right into your Workflow file but that is not recommended for security reasons.
Instead, you must use GitHub Secrets for your repository with the following names:
CLOUDWAYS_EMAIL
CLOUDWAYS_API_KEY
CLOUDWAYS_SERVER_ID
CLOUDWAYS_APP_ID
CLOUDWAYS_BRANCH_NAME
CLOUDWAYS_DEPLOY_PATH
Follow the exact secrets names in your Workflow file, so you can identify those quickly.
GitHub Secrets are set in your repository settings.
You must provide all of these inputs in your Workflow file.
email
api-key
server-id
app-id
branch-name
deploy-path
To get started, you might want to copy the content of the next example into .github/workflows/cloudways-deploy.yml
and push that file to your repository.
In the example, the deployment will start when you create and push a new tag. You can change that behavior, for example, when you create a release or a simple push to your main
branch.
name: Cloudways API Git Pull
on:
push:
tags:
- "*"
jobs:
tag:
name: New Tag
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- name: Checkout Code
uses: actions/checkout@v2
- name: Cloudways API Git Pull
uses: roelmagdaleno/cloudways-api-git-pull-action@stable
with:
email: ${{ secrets.CLOUDWAYS_EMAIL }}
api-key: ${{ secrets.CLOUDWAYS_API_KEY }}
server-id: ${{ secrets.CLOUDWAYS_SERVER_ID }}
app-id: ${{ secrets.CLOUDWAYS_APP_ID }}
branch-name: ${{ secrets.CLOUDWAYS_BRANCH_NAME }}
deploy-path: ${{ secrets.CLOUDWAYS_DEPLOY_PATH }}
If you don't see your last changes in your server after run the GitHub Action then check whether your Git branch is updated with the changes.
The deploy-path
input is the path your deployment will paste the project last changes.
If you want to deploy inside the public_html
then its value must be an empty string.
If you want to deploy, for example, to a plugin folder then the deploy-path
value must be:
deploy-path: 'wp-content/plugins/<plugin-name>/'
As you can see, we don't need to specify the public_html
string to the path.
It's important to finish the path with a slash.
This GitHub Action is available for use and remix under the MIT license.