Signed-off-by: Bo-Yi Wu <appleboy.tw@gmail.com>
6.9 KiB
🚀 SCP for GitHub Actions
GitHub Action for copying files and artifacts via SSH.
Important: Only support Linux docker container.
Usage
Copy files and artifacts via SSH:
name: scp files
on: [push]
jobs:
build:
name: Build
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@master
- name: copy file via ssh password
uses: appleboy/scp-action@master
with:
host: ${{ secrets.HOST }}
username: ${{ secrets.USERNAME }}
password: ${{ secrets.PASSWORD }}
port: ${{ secrets.PORT }}
source: "tests/a.txt,tests/b.txt"
target: "test"
Input variables
See the action.yml file for more detail information.
- host - scp remote host
- port - scp remote port, default is
22
- username - scp username
- password - scp password
- passphrase - the passphrase is usually to encrypt the private key
- fingerprint - fingerprint SHA256 of the host public key, default is to skip verification
- timeout - timeout for ssh to remote host, default is
30s
- command_timeout - timeout for scp command, default is
10m
- key - content of ssh private key. ex raw content of ~/.ssh/id_rsa
- key_path - path of ssh private key
- target - target path on the server
- source - scp file list
- rm - remove target folder before upload data, default is
false
- strip_components - remove the specified number of leading path elements.
- overwrite - use
--overwrite
flag with tar - tar_tmp_path - temporary path for tar file on the dest host
- use_insecure_cipher - include more ciphers with use_insecure_cipher (see #15)
SSH Proxy Setting:
- proxy_host - proxy host
- proxy_port - proxy port, default is
22
- proxy_username - proxy username
- proxy_password - proxy password
- proxy_passphrase - the passphrase is usually to encrypt the private key
- proxy_timeout - timeout for ssh to proxy host, default is
30s
- proxy_key - content of ssh proxy private key.
- proxy_key_path - path of ssh proxy private key
- proxy_fingerprint - fingerprint SHA256 of the host public key, default is to skip verification
- proxy_use_insecure_cipher - include more ciphers with use_insecure_cipher (see #15)
Setting up a SSH Key
Make sure to follow the below steps while creating SSH Keys and using them. The best practice is create the SSH Keys on local machine not remote machine. Login with username specified in Github Secrets. Generate a RSA Key-Pair:
rsa
ssh-keygen -t rsa -b 4096 -C "your_email@example.com"
ed25519
ssh-keygen -t ed25519 -a 200 -C "your_email@example.com"
Add newly generated key into Authorized keys. Read more about authorized keys here.
rsa
cat .ssh/id_rsa.pub | ssh b@B 'cat >> .ssh/authorized_keys'
ed25519
cat .ssh/id_ed25519.pub | ssh b@B 'cat >> .ssh/authorized_keys'
Copy Private Key content and paste in Github Secrets.
rsa
clip < ~/.ssh/id_rsa
ed25519
clip < ~/.ssh/id_ed25519
See the detail information about SSH login without password.
A note from one of our readers: Depending on your version of SSH you might also have to do the following changes:
- Put the public key in
.ssh/authorized_keys2
- Change the permissions of
.ssh
to 700 - Change the permissions of
.ssh/authorized_keys2
to 640
If you are using OpenSSH
If you are currently using OpenSSH and are getting the following error:
ssh: handshake failed: ssh: unable to authenticate, attempted methods [none publickey]
Make sure that your key algorithm of choice is supported. On Ubuntu 20.04 or later you must explicitly allow the use of the ssh-rsa algorithm. Add the following line to your OpenSSH daemon file (which is either /etc/ssh/sshd_config
or a drop-in file under
/etc/ssh/sshd_config.d/
):
CASignatureAlgorithms +ssh-rsa
Alternatively, ed25519
keys are accepted by default in OpenSSH. You could use this instead of rsa if needed:
ssh-keygen -t ed25519 -a 200 -C "your_email@example.com"
Example
Copy file via a SSH password:
- name: copy file via ssh password
uses: appleboy/scp-action@master
with:
host: example.com
username: foo
password: bar
port: 22
source: "tests/a.txt,tests/b.txt"
target: "test"
Copy file via a SSH key:
- name: copy file via ssh key
uses: appleboy/scp-action@master
with:
host: ${{ secrets.HOST }}
username: ${{ secrets.USERNAME }}
port: ${{ secrets.PORT }}
key: ${{ secrets.KEY }}
source: "tests/a.txt,tests/b.txt"
target: "test"
Example configuration for ignore list:
- name: copy file via ssh key
uses: appleboy/scp-action@master
with:
host: ${{ secrets.HOST }}
username: ${{ secrets.USERNAME }}
port: ${{ secrets.PORT }}
key: ${{ secrets.KEY }}
source: "tests/*.txt,!tests/a.txt"
target: "test"
Example configuration for multiple servers:
uses: appleboy/scp-action@master
with:
- host: "example.com"
+ host: "foo.com,bar.com"
username: foo
password: bar
port: 22
source: "tests/a.txt,tests/b.txt"
target: "test"
Remove the specified number of leading path elements:
- name: remove the specified number of leading path elements
uses: appleboy/scp-action@master
with:
host: ${{ secrets.HOST }}
username: ${{ secrets.USERNAME }}
key: ${{ secrets.KEY }}
port: ${{ secrets.PORT }}
source: "tests/a.txt,tests/b.txt"
target: "foobar"
strip_components: 1
Old target structure:
foobar
└── tests
├── a.txt
└── b.txt
New target structure:
foobar
├── a.txt
└── b.txt
Protecting a Private Key. The purpose of the passphrase is usually to encrypt the private key. This makes the key file by itself useless to an attacker. It is not uncommon for files to leak from backups or decommissioned hardware, and hackers commonly exfiltrate files from compromised systems.
- name: ssh key with passphrase
uses: appleboy/scp-action@master
with:
host: ${{ secrets.HOST }}
username: ${{ secrets.USERNAME }}
key: ${{ secrets.SSH2 }}
+ passphrase: ${{ secrets.PASSPHRASE }}
port: ${{ secrets.PORT }}
source: "tests/a.txt,tests/b.txt"
target: "test"