A service to receive github webhook events & run scripts in response. Run custom testing or deploys in response to pushes! Build things!
npm install --save jthoober
Set up jthoober somewhere that github has access to. Create a shared secret for github to send to the webhook & make a note of it. Run jthoober like this:
Usage: jthoober --rules path/to/rules.js --secret sooper-sekrit
Options:
--rules, -r path to the rules file [required]
--secret shared secret with github [required]
-p, --port port to listen on [default: 5757]
-h, --host host to bind to [default: "localhost"]
--mount path to mount routes on [default: "/webhook"]
--help Show help
I like to use nginx to terminate tls then proxy pass through to jthoober. I run it under upstart.
Set up a webhook for a project on github. Point it to your jthoober location & give it the secret string you created earlier. Observe that the test payload makes it through.
The rules file must export an array of hashes; each hash is passed to the Rule constructor to make an object. Set up rules that match repos to scripts to execute when jthoober receives an event. Here are some examples:
module.exports =
[
{
pattern: /jthoober/,
event: '*',
script: '/usr/local/bin/fortune'
},
{
pattern: /request/,
event: 'push',
script: './example-script.sh',
},
{
pattern: /reponame/,
branchPattern: /master/,
event: 'push',
script: './examples/bash-example.sh'
},
{
pattern: /reponame/,
event: 'push',
script: './examples/bash-fullevent.sh',
fullEvent: true
},
{
pattern: /reponame/,
event: 'push',
script: './example-script.js',
cmd: 'node',
args: [process.env, '-t 100']
// will result in `node ./example-script.js <repoName> <branchName> <env> -t 100`
},
{
pattern: /issue/,
event: 'issues',
func: function(event, cb) { console.log('hi'); cb(); },
},
{
pattern: /manyissues/,
event: 'issues',
args: [process.env, 'cheddar'],
func: function(event, env, cheese, cb) { console.log('hi'); cb(); }
}
];
Rules may either invoke a script file or call a javascript function.
A javascript function will be passed the event object & a callback to fire when complete.
If you set the fullEvent
boolean option to true, a script rule will be passed the entire JSON webhook event, stringified, in the WEBHOOK_EVENT environment variable.
Otherwise, all script rules receive the repo name as the first script argument & the ref of the commit (aka the branch) as the second. If the event is a push event, the third argument is the after
payload field, aka the hash of the head commit. If you are passing the event to a javascript function instead of invoking an external script, you are given have the whole event to play with.
Valid rules options:
pattern
: required; regexp to match against the repo namebranchPattern
: regexp to match against the branch name.event
: required; github event to match on;*
matches all eventsfunc
: javascript function to invoke on match; mutually exclusive withscript
script
: external executable to invoke on matchcmd
: the executable to run the script with; unused for functions. e.g.bash
args
: an array of additional args to pass to the script or function. These args come after the repo and branch names, at the end of args passed. Iffunc
is passed, these args will come after the event name.fullEvent
: a boolean, considered only for script rules.concurrentOkay
: boolean; set to true if a rule should be allowed to be run concurrently with itself
/webhook
- route that responds to the webhook. Configurable; pass --mount /foo
to the runner to mount the handler on /foo
instead.
/ping
- responds with 200 "OK"
. Use this to monitor.
The server logs events & status in json to stdout. Pipe the output through bistre --time
to get pretty logs.
j'thoob
is the official pronunciation of gi-thub
, aka the site this code is hosted on.
Pass more stuff from the hook event to the bash script. Commit hash? Why not allow rules to be arbitrary node code? Or just define a handler API? But bash is so handy.
Logging for js functions?
ISC; see the LICENSE file.