Prerequisites
Before creating your GitHub Actions workflow, you will first need to complete the following setup steps:
-
Create an Azure App Service plan.
For example, you can use the Azure CLI to create a new App Service plan:
Bash az appservice plan create \ --resource-group MY_RESOURCE_GROUP \ --name MY_APP_SERVICE_PLAN \ --is-linux
az appservice plan create \ --resource-group MY_RESOURCE_GROUP \ --name MY_APP_SERVICE_PLAN \ --is-linuxIn the command above, replace
MY_RESOURCE_GROUPwith your pre-existing Azure Resource Group, andMY_APP_SERVICE_PLANwith a new name for the App Service plan.See the Azure documentation for more information on using the Azure CLI:
- For authentication, see Sign in with Azure CLI.
- If you need to create a new resource group, see az group.
-
Create a web app.
For example, you can use the Azure CLI to create an Azure App Service web app with a .NET runtime:
Bash az webapp create \ --name MY_WEBAPP_NAME \ --plan MY_APP_SERVICE_PLAN \ --resource-group MY_RESOURCE_GROUP \ --runtime "DOTNET|5.0"az webapp create \ --name MY_WEBAPP_NAME \ --plan MY_APP_SERVICE_PLAN \ --resource-group MY_RESOURCE_GROUP \ --runtime "DOTNET|5.0"In the command above, replace the parameters with your own values, where
MY_WEBAPP_NAMEis a new name for the web app. -
Configure an Azure publish profile and create an
AZURE_WEBAPP_PUBLISH_PROFILEsecret.Generate your Azure deployment credentials using a publish profile. For more information, see Generate deployment credentials in the Azure documentation.
In your GitHub repository, create a secret named
AZURE_WEBAPP_PUBLISH_PROFILEthat contains the contents of the publish profile. For more information on creating secrets, see Using secrets in GitHub Actions. -
Optionally, configure a deployment environment. Environments are used to describe a general deployment target like
production,staging, ordevelopment. When a GitHub Actions workflow deploys to an environment, the environment is displayed on the main page of the repository. You can use environments to require approval for a job to proceed, restrict which branches can trigger a workflow, gate deployments with custom deployment protection rules, or limit access to secrets. For more information about creating environments, see Managing environments for deployment.
Creating the workflow
Once you've completed the prerequisites, you can proceed with creating the workflow.
The following example workflow demonstrates how to build and deploy a .NET project to Azure App Service when there is a push to the main branch.
Ensure that you set AZURE_WEBAPP_NAME in the workflow env key to the name of the web app you created. If the path to your project is not the repository root, change AZURE_WEBAPP_PACKAGE_PATH. If you use a version of .NET other than 5, change DOTNET_VERSION.
If you configured a deployment environment, change the value of environment to be the name of your environment. If you did not configure an environment, delete the environment key.
# This workflow uses actions that are not certified by GitHub.
# They are provided by a third-party and are governed by
# separate terms of service, privacy policy, and support
# documentation.
# GitHub recommends pinning actions to a commit SHA.
# To get a newer version, you will need to update the SHA.
# You can also reference a tag or branch, but the action may change without warning.
name: Build and deploy ASP.Net Core app to an Azure Web App
env:
AZURE_WEBAPP_NAME: MY_WEBAPP_NAME # set this to your application's name
AZURE_WEBAPP_PACKAGE_PATH: '.' # set this to the path to your web app project, defaults to the repository root
DOTNET_VERSION: '5' # set this to the .NET Core version to use
on:
push:
branches:
- main
jobs:
build:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v5
- name: Set up .NET Core
uses: actions/setup-dotnet@v4
with:
dotnet-version: ${{ env.DOTNET_VERSION }}
- name: Set up dependency caching for faster builds
uses: actions/cache@v4
with:
path: ~/.nuget/packages
key: ${{ runner.os }}-nuget-${{ hashFiles('**/packages.lock.json') }}
restore-keys: |
${{ runner.os }}-nuget-
- name: Build with dotnet
run: dotnet build --configuration Release
- name: dotnet publish
run: dotnet publish -c Release -o ${{env.DOTNET_ROOT}}/myapp
- name: Upload artifact for deployment job
uses: actions/upload-artifact@v3
with:
name: .net-app
path: ${{env.DOTNET_ROOT}}/myapp
deploy:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
needs: build
environment:
name: 'production'
url: ${{ steps.deploy-to-webapp.outputs.webapp-url }}
steps:
- name: Download artifact from build job
uses: actions/download-artifact@v3
with:
name: .net-app
- name: Deploy to Azure Web App
id: deploy-to-webapp
uses: azure/webapps-deploy@85270a1854658d167ab239bce43949edb336fa7c
with:
app-name: ${{ env.AZURE_WEBAPP_NAME }}
publish-profile: ${{ secrets.AZURE_WEBAPP_PUBLISH_PROFILE }}
package: ${{ env.AZURE_WEBAPP_PACKAGE_PATH }}
# This workflow uses actions that are not certified by GitHub.
# They are provided by a third-party and are governed by
# separate terms of service, privacy policy, and support
# documentation.
# GitHub recommends pinning actions to a commit SHA.
# To get a newer version, you will need to update the SHA.
# You can also reference a tag or branch, but the action may change without warning.
name: Build and deploy ASP.Net Core app to an Azure Web App
env:
AZURE_WEBAPP_NAME: MY_WEBAPP_NAME # set this to your application's name
AZURE_WEBAPP_PACKAGE_PATH: '.' # set this to the path to your web app project, defaults to the repository root
DOTNET_VERSION: '5' # set this to the .NET Core version to use
on:
push:
branches:
- main
jobs:
build:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v5
- name: Set up .NET Core
uses: actions/setup-dotnet@v4
with:
dotnet-version: ${{ env.DOTNET_VERSION }}
- name: Set up dependency caching for faster builds
uses: actions/cache@v4
with:
path: ~/.nuget/packages
key: ${{ runner.os }}-nuget-${{ hashFiles('**/packages.lock.json') }}
restore-keys: |
${{ runner.os }}-nuget-
- name: Build with dotnet
run: dotnet build --configuration Release
- name: dotnet publish
run: dotnet publish -c Release -o ${{env.DOTNET_ROOT}}/myapp
- name: Upload artifact for deployment job
uses: actions/upload-artifact@v3
with:
name: .net-app
path: ${{env.DOTNET_ROOT}}/myapp
deploy:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
needs: build
environment:
name: 'production'
url: ${{ steps.deploy-to-webapp.outputs.webapp-url }}
steps:
- name: Download artifact from build job
uses: actions/download-artifact@v3
with:
name: .net-app
- name: Deploy to Azure Web App
id: deploy-to-webapp
uses: azure/webapps-deploy@85270a1854658d167ab239bce43949edb336fa7c
with:
app-name: ${{ env.AZURE_WEBAPP_NAME }}
publish-profile: ${{ secrets.AZURE_WEBAPP_PUBLISH_PROFILE }}
package: ${{ env.AZURE_WEBAPP_PACKAGE_PATH }}
Further reading
- For the original workflow template, see
azure-webapps-dotnet-core.ymlin the GitHub Actionsstarter-workflowsrepository. - The action used to deploy the web app is the official Azure
Azure/webapps-deployaction. - For more examples of GitHub Action workflows that deploy to Azure, see the actions-workflow-samples repository.