GitHub Action to extract metadata from Git reference and GitHub events. This action is particularly useful if used with Docker Build Push action to tag and label Docker images.
name: ci
on:
workflow_dispatch:
push:
branches:
- 'master'
tags:
- 'v*'
pull_request:
branches:
- 'master'
jobs:
docker:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
-
name: Checkout
uses: actions/checkout@v4
-
name: Docker meta
id: meta
uses: docker/metadata-action@v5
with:
images: name/app
-
name: Login to DockerHub
if: github.event_name != 'pull_request'
uses: docker/login-action@v3
with:
username: ${{ secrets.DOCKERHUB_USERNAME }}
password: ${{ secrets.DOCKERHUB_TOKEN }}
-
name: Build and push
uses: docker/build-push-action@v5
with:
context: .
push: ${{ github.event_name != 'pull_request' }}
tags: ${{ steps.meta.outputs.tags }}
labels: ${{ steps.meta.outputs.labels }}
Event | Ref | Docker Tags |
---|---|---|
pull_request |
refs/pull/2/merge |
pr-2 |
push |
refs/heads/master |
master |
push |
refs/heads/releases/v1 |
releases-v1 |
push tag |
refs/tags/v1.2.3 |
v1.2.3 , latest |
push tag |
refs/tags/v2.0.8-beta.67 |
v2.0.8-beta.67 , latest |
workflow_dispatch |
refs/heads/master |
master |
name: ci
on:
push:
branches:
- 'master'
tags:
- 'v*'
pull_request:
branches:
- 'master'
jobs:
docker:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
-
name: Checkout
uses: actions/checkout@v4
-
name: Docker meta
id: meta
uses: docker/metadata-action@v5
with:
images: |
name/app
tags: |
type=ref,event=branch
type=ref,event=pr
type=semver,pattern={{version}}
type=semver,pattern={{major}}.{{minor}}
-
name: Login to DockerHub
if: github.event_name != 'pull_request'
uses: docker/login-action@v3
with:
username: ${{ secrets.DOCKERHUB_USERNAME }}
password: ${{ secrets.DOCKERHUB_TOKEN }}
-
name: Build and push
uses: docker/build-push-action@v5
with:
context: .
push: ${{ github.event_name != 'pull_request' }}
tags: ${{ steps.meta.outputs.tags }}
labels: ${{ steps.meta.outputs.labels }}
Event | Ref | Docker Tags |
---|---|---|
pull_request |
refs/pull/2/merge |
pr-2 |
push |
refs/heads/master |
master |
push |
refs/heads/releases/v1 |
releases-v1 |
push tag |
refs/tags/v1.2.3 |
1.2.3 , 1.2 , latest |
push tag |
refs/tags/v2.0.8-beta.67 |
2.0.8-beta.67 |
This action also handles a bake definition file that can be used with the
Docker Bake action. You just have to
declare an empty target named docker-metadata-action
and inherit from it.
// docker-bake.hcl
target "docker-metadata-action" {}
target "build" {
inherits = ["docker-metadata-action"]
context = "./"
dockerfile = "Dockerfile"
platforms = [
"linux/amd64",
"linux/arm/v6",
"linux/arm/v7",
"linux/arm64",
"linux/386"
]
}
name: ci
on:
push:
branches:
- 'master'
tags:
- 'v*'
jobs:
docker:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
-
name: Checkout
uses: actions/checkout@v4
-
name: Docker meta
id: meta
uses: docker/metadata-action@v5
with:
images: |
name/app
tags: |
type=ref,event=branch
type=ref,event=pr
type=semver,pattern={{version}}
type=semver,pattern={{major}}.{{minor}}
type=sha
-
name: Build
uses: docker/bake-action@v3
with:
files: |
./docker-bake.hcl
${{ steps.meta.outputs.bake-file }}
targets: build
Content of ${{ steps.meta.outputs.bake-file }}
file, combining tags and
labels, will look like this with refs/tags/v1.2.3
ref:
{
"target": {
"docker-metadata-action": {
"tags": [
"name/app:1.2.3",
"name/app:1.2",
"name/app:sha-90dd603",
"name/app:latest"
],
"labels": {
"org.opencontainers.image.title": "Hello-World",
"org.opencontainers.image.description": "This your first repo!",
"org.opencontainers.image.url": "https://github.com/octocat/Hello-World",
"org.opencontainers.image.source": "https://github.com/octocat/Hello-World",
"org.opencontainers.image.version": "1.2.3",
"org.opencontainers.image.created": "2020-01-10T00:30:00.000Z",
"org.opencontainers.image.revision": "860c1904a1ce19322e91ac35af1ab07466440c37",
"org.opencontainers.image.licenses": "MIT"
},
"args": {
"DOCKER_META_IMAGES": "name/app",
"DOCKER_META_VERSION": "1.2.3"
}
}
}
}
You can also use the bake-file-tags
and bake-file-labels
outputs if you
just want to use tags and/or labels respectively. The following example is
similar to the previous one:
-
name: Build
uses: docker/bake-action@v3
with:
files: |
./docker-bake.hcl
${{ steps.meta.outputs.bake-file-tags }}
${{ steps.meta.outputs.bake-file-labels }}
targets: build
The following inputs can be used as step.with
keys:
List
type is a newline-delimited stringlabels: | org.opencontainers.image.title=MyCustomTitle org.opencontainers.image.description=Another description org.opencontainers.image.vendor=MyCompany
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
context |
String | Where to get context data. Allowed options are: workflow (default), git . |
images |
List | List of Docker images to use as base name for tags |
tags |
List | List of tags as key-value pair attributes |
flavor |
List | Flavor to apply |
labels |
List | List of custom labels |
annotations |
List | List of custom anntoations |
sep-tags |
String | Separator to use for tags output (default \n ) |
sep-labels |
String | Separator to use for labels output (default \n ) |
sep-annotations |
String | Separator to use for annotations output (default \n ) |
bake-target |
String | Bake target name (default docker-metadata-action ) |
The following outputs are available:
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
version |
String | Docker image version |
tags |
String | Docker tags |
labels |
String | Docker labels |
annotations |
String | Annotations |
json |
String | JSON output of tags and labels |
bake-file-tags |
File | Bake file definition path with tags |
bake-file-labels |
File | Bake file definition path with labels |
bake-file-annotations |
File | Bake file definition path with annotations |
Alternatively, each output is also exported as an environment variable:
DOCKER_METADATA_OUTPUT_VERSION
DOCKER_METADATA_OUTPUT_TAGS
DOCKER_METADATA_OUTPUT_LABELS
DOCKER_METADATA_OUTPUT_ANNOTATIONS
DOCKER_METADATA_OUTPUT_JSON
DOCKER_METADATA_OUTPUT_BAKE_FILE_TAGS
DOCKER_METADATA_OUTPUT_BAKE_FILE_LABELS
DOCKER_METADATA_OUTPUT_BAKE_FILE_ANNOTATIONS
So it can be used with our Docker Build Push action:
- uses: docker/build-push-action@v5
with:
build-args: |
DOCKER_METADATA_OUTPUT_JSON
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
DOCKER_METADATA_PR_HEAD_SHA |
Bool | If true , set associated head SHA instead of commit SHA that triggered the workflow on pull request event |
DOCKER_METADATA_ANNOTATIONS_LEVELS |
String | Comma separated list of annotations levels to set for annotations output separated (default manifest ) |
context
defines where to get context metadata:
# default
context: workflow
# or
context: git
workflow
: Get context metadata from the workflow (GitHub context). See https://docs.github.com/en/actions/learn-github-actions/contexts#github-contextgit
: Get context metadata from the workflow and overrides some of them with current Git context, such asref
andsha
.
images
defines a list of Docker images to use as base name for tags
:
images: |
name/foo
ghcr.io/name/bar
# or
name=name/foo
name=ghcr.io/name/bar
Extended attributes and default values:
images: |
name=,enable=true
name=<string>
image base nameenable=<true|false>
enable this entry (defaulttrue
)
If images
is empty, tags will be generated without base name.
flavor
defines a global behavior for tags
:
flavor: |
latest=auto
prefix=
suffix=
latest=<auto|true|false>
: Handle latest tag (defaultauto
)prefix=<string>,onlatest=<true|false>
: A global prefix for each generated tag and optionally forlatest
suffix=<string>,onlatest=<true|false>
: A global suffix for each generated tag and optionally forlatest
tags
is the core input of this action as everything related to it will
reflect the output metadata. This one is in the form of a key-value pair list
in CSV format to remove limitations intrinsically linked to GitHub Actions
(only string format is handled in the input fields). Here is an example:
tags: |
type=schedule
type=semver,pattern={{version}}
type=semver,pattern={{major}}.{{minor}}
type=semver,pattern={{major}}
type=ref,event=branch
type=ref,event=pr
type=sha
Each entry is defined by a type
, which are:
And global attributes:
enable=<true|false>
enable this entry (defaulttrue
)priority=<number>
set tag priority orderprefix=<string>
add prefixsuffix=<string>
add suffix
Default entries if tags
input is empty:
tags: |
type=schedule
type=ref,event=branch
type=ref,event=tag
type=ref,event=pr
tags: |
# minimal
type=schedule
# default
type=schedule,pattern=nightly
# handlebars
type=schedule,pattern={{date 'YYYYMMDD'}}
# handlebars with timezone
type=schedule,pattern={{date 'YYYYMMDD-hhmmss' tz='Asia/Tokyo'}}
Will be used on schedule event.
pattern
is a specially crafted attribute to support Handlebars' template
with the following expressions:
date 'format' tz='Timezone'
; render date by its moment format. Defaulttz
is UTC.
Pattern | Output |
---|---|
nightly |
nightly |
{{date 'YYYYMMDD'}} |
20200110 |
{{date 'YYYYMMDD-HHmmss' tz='Asia/Tokyo'}} |
20200110-093000 |
Extended attributes and default values:
tags: |
type=schedule,enable=true,priority=1000,prefix=,suffix=,pattern=nightly
tags: |
# minimal
type=semver,pattern={{version}}
# use custom value instead of git tag
type=semver,pattern={{version}},value=v1.0.0
Will be used on a push tag event
and requires a valid semver Git tag, but you can also
use a custom value through value
attribute.
pattern
attribute supports Handlebars template
with the following expressions:
raw
; the actual tagversion
; shorthand for{{major}}.{{minor}}.{{patch}}
(can include pre-release)major
; major version identifierminor
; minor version identifierpatch
; patch version identifier
Git tag | Pattern | Output |
---|---|---|
v1.2.3 |
{{raw}} |
v1.2.3 |
v1.2.3 |
{{version}} |
1.2.3 |
v1.2.3 |
{{major}}.{{minor}} |
1.2 |
v1.2.3 |
v{{major}} |
v1 |
v1.2.3 |
{{minor}} |
2 |
v1.2.3 |
{{patch}} |
3 |
v2.0.8-beta.67 |
{{raw}} |
v2.0.8-beta.67 |
v2.0.8-beta.67 |
{{version}} |
2.0.8-beta.67 |
v2.0.8-beta.67 |
{{major}}.{{minor}} |
2.0.8-beta.67 * |
*Pre-release (rc, beta, alpha) will only extend
{{version}}
(or{{raw}}
if specified) as tag because they are updated frequently, and contain many breaking changes that are (by the author's design) not yet fit for public consumption.
Extended attributes and default values:
tags: |
type=semver,enable=true,priority=900,prefix=,suffix=,pattern=,value=
tags: |
# minimal
type=pep440,pattern={{version}}
# use custom value instead of git tag
type=pep440,pattern={{version}},value=1.0.0
Will be used on a push tag event
and requires a Git tag that conforms to PEP 440,
but you can also use a custom value through value
attribute.
pattern
attribute supports Handlebars template
with the following expressions:
raw
; the actual tagversion
; cleaned versionmajor
; major version identifierminor
; minor version identifierpatch
; patch version identifier
Git tag | Pattern | Output |
---|---|---|
1.2.3 |
{{raw}} |
1.2.3 |
1.2.3 |
{{version}} |
1.2.3 |
v1.2.3 |
{{version}} |
1.2.3 |
1.2.3 |
{{major}}.{{minor}} |
1.2 |
1.2.3 |
v{{major}} |
v1 |
v1.2.3rc2 |
{{raw}} |
v1.2.3rc2 |
1.2.3rc2 |
{{version}} |
1.2.3rc2 |
1.2.3rc2 |
{{major}}.{{minor}} |
1.2.3rc2 * |
1.2.3post1 |
{{major}}.{{minor}} |
1.2.3.post1 * |
1.2.3beta2 |
{{major}}.{{minor}} |
1.2.3b2 * |
1.0dev4 |
{{major}}.{{minor}} |
1.0.dev4 * |
*dev/pre/post release will only extend
{{version}}
(or{{raw}}
if specified) as tag because they are updated frequently, and contain many breaking changes that are (by the author's design) not yet fit for public consumption.
Extended attributes and default values:
tags: |
type=pep440,enable=true,priority=900,prefix=,suffix=,pattern=,value=
tags: |
# minimal
type=match,pattern=\d.\d.\d
# define match group
type=match,pattern=v(.*),group=1
# use custom value instead of git tag
type=match,pattern=v(.*),group=1,value=v1.0.0
Can create a regular expression for matching Git tag with a pattern and
capturing group. Will be used on a push tag event
but, you can also use a custom value through value
attribute.
Git tag | Pattern | Group | Output |
---|---|---|---|
v1.2.3 |
\d.\d.\d |
0 |
1.2.3 |
v2.0.8-beta.67 |
v(.*) |
1 |
2.0.8-beta.67 |
v2.0.8-beta.67 |
v(\d.\d) |
1 |
2.0 |
20200110-RC2 |
\d+ |
0 |
20200110 |
p1/v1.2.3 |
p1/v(\d.\d.\d) |
1 |
1.2.3 |
Extended attributes and default values:
tags: |
type=match,enable=true,priority=800,prefix=,suffix=,pattern=,group=0,value=
tags: |
# minimal
type=edge
# define default branch
type=edge,branch=main
An edge
tag reflects the last commit of the active branch on your Git
repository. I usually prefer to use edge
as a Docker tag for a better
distinction or common pattern. This is also used by official images like Alpine.
Extended attributes and default values:
tags: |
type=edge,enable=true,priority=700,prefix=,suffix=,branch=$repo.default_branch
tags: |
# branch event
type=ref,event=branch
# tag event
type=ref,event=tag
# pull request event
type=ref,event=pr
This type handles Git ref (or reference) for the following events:
branch
; eg.refs/heads/master
tag
; eg.refs/tags/v1.0.0
pr
; eg.refs/pull/318/merge
Event | Ref | Output |
---|---|---|
pull_request |
refs/pull/2/merge |
pr-2 |
push |
refs/heads/master |
master |
push |
refs/heads/my/branch |
my-branch |
push tag |
refs/tags/v1.2.3 |
v1.2.3 |
push tag |
refs/tags/v2.0.8-beta.67 |
v2.0.8-beta.67 |
workflow_dispatch |
refs/heads/master |
master |
Extended attributes and default values:
tags: |
# branch event
type=ref,enable=true,priority=600,prefix=,suffix=,event=branch
# tag event
type=ref,enable=true,priority=600,prefix=,suffix=,event=tag
# pull request event
type=ref,enable=true,priority=600,prefix=pr-,suffix=,event=pr
tags: |
type=raw,value=foo
type=raw,value=bar
# or
type=raw,foo
type=raw,bar
# or
foo
bar
Output custom tags according to your needs.
Extended attributes and default values:
tags: |
type=raw,enable=true,priority=200,prefix=,suffix=,value=
tags: |
# minimal (short sha)
type=sha
# full length sha
type=sha,format=long
Output Git short commit (or long if specified) as Docker tag like sha-ad132f5
.
Extended attributes and default values:
tags: |
type=sha,enable=true,priority=100,prefix=sha-,suffix=,format=short
In order to comply with the specification, the image name components may contain lowercase letters, digits and separators. A separator is defined as a period, one or two underscores, or one or more dashes. A name component may not start or end with a separator.
A tag name must be a valid ASCII chars sequences and may contain lowercase and uppercase letters, digits, underscores, periods and dashes. A tag name may not start with a period or a dash and may contain a maximum of 128 characters.
To ease the integration in your workflow, this action will automatically:
- Lowercase the image name
- Replace invalid chars sequences with
-
for tags
latest
tag is handled through the flavor
input. It will be
generated by default (auto
mode) for:
For conditionally tagging with latest for a specific branch name, e.g. if your
default branch name is not master
, use type=raw
with a boolean expression:
tags: |
# set latest tag for master branch
type=raw,value=latest,enable=${{ github.ref == format('refs/heads/{0}', 'master') }}
You can also use the {{is_default_branch}}
global expression
to conditionally tag with latest for the default branch:
tags: |
# set latest tag for default branch
type=raw,value=latest,enable={{is_default_branch}}
priority=<int>
attribute is used to sort tags in the final list. The higher
the value, the higher the priority. The first tag in the list (higher priority)
will be used as the image version for generated OCI label and version
output.
Each tags type
attribute has a default priority:
Attribute | Default priority |
---|---|
schedule |
1000 |
semver |
900 |
pep440 |
900 |
match |
800 |
edge |
700 |
ref |
600 |
raw |
200 |
sha |
100 |
The following Handlebars' template expressions
for prefix
, suffix
, value
and enable
attributes are available:
tags: |
# dynamically set the branch name as a prefix
type=sha,prefix={{branch}}-
# dynamically set the branch name and sha as a custom tag
type=raw,value=mytag-{{branch}}-{{sha}}
Returns the branch name that triggered the workflow run. Will be empty if not a branch reference:
Event | Ref | Output |
---|---|---|
pull_request |
refs/pull/2/merge |
|
push |
refs/heads/master |
master |
push |
refs/heads/my/branch |
my-branch |
push tag |
refs/tags/v1.2.3 |
Returns the tag name that triggered the workflow run. Will be empty if not a tag reference:
Event | Ref | Output |
---|---|---|
pull_request |
refs/pull/2/merge |
|
push |
refs/heads/master |
|
push |
refs/heads/my/branch |
|
push tag |
refs/tags/v1.2.3 |
v1.2.3 |
Returns the short commit SHA that triggered the workflow run (e.g., 90dd603
).
Returns the base ref or target branch of the pull request that triggered the workflow run. Will be empty for a branch reference:
Event | Ref | Output |
---|---|---|
pull_request |
refs/pull/2/merge |
master |
push |
refs/heads/master |
|
push |
refs/heads/my/branch |
|
push tag * |
refs/tags/v1.2.3 |
master |
*
base_ref
is available in the push payload but doesn't always seem to return the expected branch when the push tag event occurs. It's also not documented in GitHub docs. We keep it for backward compatibility, but it's not recommended relying on it. More context in #192.
Returns true
if the branch that triggered the workflow run is the default
one, otherwise false
.
Returns the current date rendered by its moment format.
Default tz
is UTC.
Expression | Output example |
---|---|
{{date 'YYYYMMDD'}} |
20200110 |
{{date 'dddd, MMMM Do YYYY, h:mm:ss a'}} |
Friday, January 10th 2020, 3:25:50 pm |
{{date 'YYYYMMDD-HHmmss' tz='Asia/Tokyo'}} |
20200110-093000 |
Major version zero (0.y.z
) is for initial development and may change at
any time. This means the public API should not be considered stable.
In this case, Docker tag 0
should not be generated if you're using type=semver
with {{major}}
pattern. You can manage this behavior like this:
# refs/tags/v0.1.2
tags: |
# output 0.1.2
type=semver,pattern={{version}}
# output 0.1
type=semver,pattern={{major}}.{{minor}}
# disabled if major zero
type=semver,pattern={{major}},enable=${{ !startsWith(github.ref, 'refs/tags/v0.') }}
The json
output is a JSON object composed of the generated tags and labels so
that you can reuse them further in your workflow using the fromJSON
function:
-
name: Docker meta
uses: docker/metadata-action@v5
id: meta
with:
images: name/app
-
name: Build and push
uses: docker/build-push-action@v5
with:
tags: ${{ steps.meta.outputs.tags }}
labels: ${{ steps.meta.outputs.labels }}
build-args: |
BUILDTIME=${{ fromJSON(steps.meta.outputs.json).labels['org.opencontainers.image.created'] }}
VERSION=${{ fromJSON(steps.meta.outputs.json).labels['org.opencontainers.image.version'] }}
REVISION=${{ fromJSON(steps.meta.outputs.json).labels['org.opencontainers.image.revision'] }}
If some OCI Image Format Specification generated are not suitable as labels/annotations, you can overwrite them like this:
-
name: Docker meta
id: meta
uses: docker/metadata-action@v5
with:
images: name/app
labels: |
maintainer=CrazyMax
org.opencontainers.image.title=MyCustomTitle
org.opencontainers.image.description=Another description
org.opencontainers.image.vendor=MyCompany
Since Buildx 0.12, it is possible to set annotations to your image through the
--annotation
flag.
With the build-push-action
,
you can set the annotations
input with the value of the annotations
output
of the metadata-action
:
-
name: Docker meta
uses: docker/metadata-action@v5
with:
images: name/app
-
name: Build and push
uses: docker/build-push-action@v5
with:
tags: ${{ steps.meta.outputs.tags }}
annotations: ${{ steps.meta.outputs.annotations }}
The same can be done with the bake-action
:
-
name: Docker meta
uses: docker/metadata-action@v5
with:
images: name/app
-
name: Build
uses: docker/bake-action@v3
with:
files: |
./docker-bake.hcl
${{ steps.meta.outputs.bake-file-tags }}
${{ steps.meta.outputs.bake-file-annotations }}
targets: build
Note that annotations can be attached at many different levels within a manifest.
By default, the generated annotations will be attached to image manifests,
but different registries may expect annotations at different places;
a common practice is to read annotations at image indexes if present,
which are often used by multi-arch builds to index platform-specific images.
If you want to specify level(s) for your annotations, you can use the
DOCKER_METADATA_ANNOTATIONS_LEVELS
environment variable
with a comma separated list of all levels the annotations should be attached to (defaults to manifest
).
The following configuration demonstrates the ability to attach annotations to both image manifests and image indexes,
though your registry may only need annotations at the index level. (That is, index
alone may be enough.)
Please consult the documentation of your registry.
-
name: Docker meta
uses: docker/metadata-action@v5
with:
images: name/app
env:
DOCKER_METADATA_ANNOTATIONS_LEVELS: manifest,index
-
name: Build and push
uses: docker/build-push-action@v5
with:
tags: ${{ steps.meta.outputs.tags }}
annotations: ${{ steps.meta.outputs.annotations }}
More information about annotations in the BuildKit documentation.
Want to contribute? Awesome! You can find information about contributing to this project in the CONTRIBUTING.md