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ArgoCD Config Updater

This action can be used inside a GitHub workflow to update YAML config files based on external events. Specifically, these are config files for Apollo's particular use of ArgoCD. We use an apollo-application Helm chart to define the ArgoCD Applications in our environment. This action knows how to make several kinds of updates to the application configuration.

Specifically, if our repository has a chart with this Chart.yaml:

apiVersion: v2
name: some-app
description: some-app installations
type: application
version: 0.1.0

dependencies:
  - name: apollo-application
    version: '>= 0.1.0'
    repository: https://some.repository.example/apollo-application
    alias: dev
  - name: apollo-application
    version: '>= 0.1.0'
    repository: https://some.repository.example/apollo-application
    alias: staging
  - name: apollo-application
    version: '>= 0.1.0'
    repository: https://some.repository.example/apollo-application
    alias: prod

and this values.yaml:

global:
  gitConfig:
    repoURL: https://github.com/some-org/some-repository-of-charts.git
    path: charts/some-app
  dockerImage:
    repository: some-app

dev:
  gitConfig:
    trackMutableRef: main
    ref: c8e6a2a5ee0fa3950d190c835f4190f19e321f92
  dockerImage:
    trackMutableTag: main
    tag: main---0000123-abcd0123

staging:
  promote:
    from: dev
  gitConfig:
    ref: c8e6a2a5ee0fa3950d190c835f4190f19e321f92
  dockerImage:
    tag: main---0000100-cbcd0123

prod:
  promote:
    from: staging
  gitConfig:
    ref: c8e6a2a5ee0fa3950d190c835f4190f19e321f92
  dockerImage:
    tag: main---0000100-cbcd0123

apollo-application is a chart that uses the gitConfig and dockerImage configuration to generate an ArgoCD Application resource.

Running this action can do three different things, depending on which inputs are provided. You must provide the files input, which is a glob pattern for which files to update.

The effect of this action is to rewrite YAML files in the repository. It is designed for use with other actions that can commit and push the changes or maintain PRs containing the changes. Specifically, Apollo uses git-auto-commit-action for trackMutableRef and trackMutableTag, and create-pull-request for promote.

Updating git refs

For each top-level section with a gitConfig block, if the gitConfig block contains the keys repoURL, path, trackMutableRef and ref, then this action can update the value at ref to be equal to the current git SHA for the ref named by trackMutableRef in the repository named by repoURL. (The repoURL and path keys may also be found in a gitConfig block under the top-level global block. You may also specify the mutable ref to track under the key track at the same level as gitConfig; in this case, the same value will be used for Docker tag tracking.)

If the value at ref is already a git commit SHA, and the subtree named by path is identical at the commit it names and the commit named by trackMutableRef (based on comparing tree SHAs), it will not change the value. This means that changes to other parts of the repository will not result in "no-op" changes to this line.

As a convenience, if trackMutableRef has the form pr-123 followed by digits, it is converted to pull/123/head, which is the ref syntax GitHub uses for PRs.

The effect of using trackMutableRef is similar to just specifying the mutable ref directly as the ref which the ArgoCD application tracks. But by explicitly changing the config file for each update, you can clearly see the difference between different environments, including environments that are not updated automatically in this way. Then, promote blocks (see below) can copy the git SHA to another application which does not use trackMutableRef.

This functionality uses the GitHub API, which requires a GitHub API token to be passed via the github-token input. This token needs to have read access to code and metadata in all repositories that are referenced by repoURL.

Updating Docker tags

For each top-level section with a dockerImage block, if the dockerImage block contains the keys repository, trackMutableTag and tag, then this action can update the value at tag to be equal to an "immutable" tag which points at the same image version as the tag named in trackMutableTag for the image named by repository. (The repository key may also be found in a dockerImage block under the top-level global block. You may also specify the mutable tag to track under the key track at the same level as dockerImage; in this case, the same value will be used for git ref tracking.)

Specifically, this automation treats as immutable any tag starting with the value of trackMutableTag followed by ---. The assumption is that a build process creates these immutable tags and also updates the shorter mutable tag.

This specifically works with Docker images hosted at Google Artifact Registry. All docker images must be in the same AR registry, named by the update-docker-tags-for-artifact-registry-repository input, which has the form projects/PROJECT/locations/LOCATION/repositories/REPOSITORY.

(Naming is a bit confusing here, because Docker uses the word "repository" to mean "a bunch of similar images that have different versions and tags", and Artifact Registry uses the word "repository" to mean "a collection of Docker repositories and other kinds of packages". The repository named in the action input is an AR repository; the repository named in the dockerImage section is a Docker repository (ie, image name).)

If the value at tag already points at the same image version as the value at trackMutableTag (and it starts with the trackMutableTag value and ---) then it is left alone. Otherwise, it is set to the tag pointing at the same version as trackMutableTag of the TAG---* format which comes lexicographically first.

Like with trackMutableRef, this is helpful for making something which can be "promoted", but in addition, pointing Kubernetes containers at mutable Docker tags isn't very helpful because deployments will not restart just because the tag points at a new image. This mechanism means that changes to the mutable tag will actually lead to rollouts.

This functionality uses the Google Cloud Platform API, which requires read access to the Artifact Registry repository in question (specifically, the artifactregistry.tags.get and artifactregistry.versions.get permissions). You should run the google-github-actions/auth action before this one.

Promoting values between apps

Top-level sections can have a promote block with a from key naming a different top-level section. If the action is run with update-promoted-values set (and, if provided, promotion-target-regexp matches the section's name), then the automation will copy values from the other block to the target block. By default, the copied values are gitConfig.ref and dockerImage.tag; you can specify a different set of paths via promote.yamlPaths. This is applied after updating mutable refs and tags.

Caveat

This package is designed specifically to meet the needs of Apollo's ArgoCD installation. We are making it publicly available under the MIT license to serve as an example/starting point for other organizations with similar needs, but we do not intend to generalize it in ways that are not relevant to our installation, or to provide any support.

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A GitHub action for updating ArgoCD configuration based on Git and GCP Artifact Repository events

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