Node.js CI workflow (dwyl/learn-tdd)
The Node.js CI workflow from dwyl/learn-tdd, explained and optimized by Latchkey.
CI health: C - fair
Point runs-on at Latchkey and get run de-duplication, job timeouts, SHA-pinned actions, self-healing for flaky steps, and up to 58% lower cost, applied automatically.
What it does
This is the Node.js CI workflow from the dwyl/learn-tdd repository, a real project running GitHub Actions. It is shown here with attribution under its MPL-2.0 license.
Below, Latchkey shows a faster, safer version produced by its optimization engine.
The workflow
# This workflow will do a clean install of node dependencies, cache/restore them, build the source code and run tests across different versions of node
# For more information see: https://help.github.com/actions/language-and-framework-guides/using-nodejs-with-github-actions
name: Node.js CI
on:
push:
branches: [ main ]
pull_request:
branches: [ main ]
jobs:
build:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
strategy:
matrix:
node-version: [12.x, 14.x, 16.x]
# See supported Node.js release schedule at https://nodejs.org/en/about/releases/
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v2
- name: Use Node.js ${{ matrix.node-version }}
uses: actions/setup-node@v2
with:
node-version: ${{ matrix.node-version }}
cache: 'npm'
- run: npm ci
# - run: npm run build --if-present
- run: npm test
- name: Upload coverage to Codecov
uses: codecov/codecov-action@v1 The same workflow, on Latchkey
Removes redundant runs and caps runaway jobs. Added and changed lines are highlighted.
# This workflow will do a clean install of node dependencies, cache/restore them, build the source code and run tests across different versions of node # For more information see: https://help.github.com/actions/language-and-framework-guides/using-nodejs-with-github-actions name: Node.js CI on: push: branches: [ main ] pull_request: branches: [ main ] concurrency: group: ${{ github.workflow }}-${{ github.ref }} cancel-in-progress: true jobs: build: timeout-minutes: 30 runs-on: latchkey-small strategy: matrix: node-version: [12.x, 14.x, 16.x] # See supported Node.js release schedule at https://nodejs.org/en/about/releases/ steps: - uses: actions/checkout@v2 - name: Use Node.js ${{ matrix.node-version }} uses: actions/setup-node@v2 with: node-version: ${{ matrix.node-version }} cache: 'npm' - run: npm ci # - run: npm run build --if-present - run: npm test - name: Upload coverage to Codecov uses: codecov/codecov-action@v1
What changed
- Run on Latchkey managed runners with one line (
runs-on), which apply the fixes below automatically and self-heal transient failures. This example useslatchkey-small; pick the runner size that fits the job. - Cancel superseded runs when a branch or PR gets a newer push.
- Add a job timeout so a hung step cannot burn hours of runner time.
1 third-party action is referenced by a movable tag. Pin it to the commit SHA (Latchkey resolves and applies this automatically) so a repointed tag cannot change what runs.
What Latchkey heals here
This workflow has steps that commonly fail on transient issues (network, registries, flaky browsers). On Latchkey managed runners they are detected, retried, and self-healed instead of failing your build:
- Dependency installs
This workflow runs 1 job (3 with the matrix expanded) per trigger. On Latchkey the same minutes cost up to 58% less than GitHub-hosted, with zero queue time.