We recently published a blog on how to send a slack notification when a github action fails. We got a great response from the open-source community. Some of the community members asked us about how they can send an email notification when a Github Action fails. So to take in the request, today we will see how we can build a workflow that allows us to achieve this purpose.
Github has this feature natively that sends an email when a Github Action fails. It works efficiently when you are working on an individual project. However, when working in a team, we often want to notify more than one team member about the possible failure of the workflow.
- Create a sample workflow
- Add Send Email Action
Results
1. Create a sample workflow
Let us write a simple workflow that prints the infamous Hello World. Create a new file build.yml in .github/workflows directory and add:
name: Build
on:
push:
branches: main
jobs:
build:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v2
- name: Hello World
run: echo Hello, world!
2. Add Send Email Action
Dawid Dziurla has published a Github action that allows us to configure a lot of aspects related to sending the emails. We just need to add the below step to our workflow:
- name: Send mail
if: always()
uses: dawidd6/action-send-mail@v2
with:
# mail server settings
server_address: smtp.gmail.com
server_port: 465
# user credentials
username: ${{ secrets.EMAIL_USERNAME }}
password: ${{ secrets.EMAIL_PASSWORD }}
# email subject
subject: ${{ github.job }} job of ${{ github.repository }} has ${{ job.status }}
# email body as text
body: ${{ github.job }} job in worflow ${{ github.workflow }} of ${{ github.repository }} has ${{ job.status }}
# comma-separated string, send email to
to: johndoe@gmail.com,doejohn@gmail.com
# from email name
from: John Doe
Use echo "$
{{ toJson(github) }}
" to get more workflow context variables.
The if: always() directive tells the Github Actions to always run this step regardless of whether the preceding steps have been executed successfully or not. We use the workflow’s context variables to build our email subject and body. Don’t forget to add your username and password as Action secrets.
Make sure to use App-Specific password for the above action. Learn how to create an app-specific password for GMail.
Results
Before testing the action in use, let us deliberately fail the action. All we need to do is update the Hello World step’s run command to echo Hello, world! && exit 1. exit 1 sets an exit status of 1 which tells the Github Actions that some kind of error has occurred. Let push our code and see what happens.
From the above screenshot, we can see that the Send mail step was executed even though the previous step failed. Let us check our inbox for the email about the failure.
Sweet! We can see that email notification was sent to our recipients. The subject and body were populated with the appropriate repository and workflow.
Github Actions is a great CI/CD tool. By using the right actions, we can build workflows that help in boosting team productivity at any workspace. If you any doubts or appreciation for our team, let us know in the comments below.
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