GitHub Action for creating a GitHub App installation access token.
In order to use this action, you need to:
- Register new GitHub App.
- Store the App's ID or Client ID in your repository environment variables (example: APP_ID).
- Store the App's private key in your repository secrets (example: PRIVATE_KEY).
Important
An installation access token expires after 1 hour. Please see this comment for alternative approaches if you have long-running processes.
name: Run tests on staging
on:
  push:
    branches:
      - main
jobs:
  hello-world:
    runs-on: ubuntu-latest
    steps:
      - uses: actions/create-github-app-token@v2
        id: app-token
        with:
          app-id: ${{ vars.APP_ID }}
          private-key: ${{ secrets.PRIVATE_KEY }}
      - uses: ./actions/staging-tests
        with:
          token: ${{ steps.app-token.outputs.token }}on: [pull_request]
jobs:
  auto-format:
    runs-on: ubuntu-latest
    steps:
      - uses: actions/create-github-app-token@v2
        id: app-token
        with:
          # required
          app-id: ${{ vars.APP_ID }}
          private-key: ${{ secrets.PRIVATE_KEY }}
      - uses: actions/checkout@v4
        with:
          token: ${{ steps.app-token.outputs.token }}
          ref: ${{ github.head_ref }}
          # Make sure the value of GITHUB_TOKEN will not be persisted in repo's config
          persist-credentials: false
      - uses: creyD/prettier_action@v4.3
        with:
          github_token: ${{ steps.app-token.outputs.token }}on: [pull_request]
jobs:
  auto-format:
    runs-on: ubuntu-latest
    steps:
      - uses: actions/create-github-app-token@v2
        id: app-token
        with:
          # required
          app-id: ${{ vars.APP_ID }}
          private-key: ${{ secrets.PRIVATE_KEY }}
      - name: Get GitHub App User ID
        id: get-user-id
        run: echo "user-id=$(gh api "/users/${{ steps.app-token.outputs.app-slug }}[bot]" --jq .id)" >> "$GITHUB_OUTPUT"
        env:
          GH_TOKEN: ${{ steps.app-token.outputs.token }}
      - id: committer
        run: echo "string=${{ steps.app-token.outputs.app-slug }}[bot] <${{ steps.get-user-id.outputs.user-id }}+${{ steps.app-token.outputs.app-slug }}[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>"  >> "$GITHUB_OUTPUT"
      - run: echo "committer string is ${{ steps.committer.outputs.string }}"on: [pull_request]
jobs:
  auto-format:
    runs-on: ubuntu-latest
    steps:
      - uses: actions/create-github-app-token@v2
        id: app-token
        with:
          # required
          app-id: ${{ vars.APP_ID }}
          private-key: ${{ secrets.PRIVATE_KEY }}
      - name: Get GitHub App User ID
        id: get-user-id
        run: echo "user-id=$(gh api "/users/${{ steps.app-token.outputs.app-slug }}[bot]" --jq .id)" >> "$GITHUB_OUTPUT"
        env:
          GH_TOKEN: ${{ steps.app-token.outputs.token }}
      - run: |
          git config --global user.name '${{ steps.app-token.outputs.app-slug }}[bot]'
          git config --global user.email '${{ steps.get-user-id.outputs.user-id }}+${{ steps.app-token.outputs.app-slug }}[bot]@users.noreply.github.com'
      # git commands like commit work using the bot user
      - run: |
          git add .
          git commit -m "Auto-generated changes"
          git pushTip
The <BOT USER ID> is the numeric user ID of the app's bot user, which can be found under https://api.github.com/users/<app-slug>%5Bbot%5D.
For example, we can check at https://api.github.com/users/dependabot[bot] to see the user ID of Dependabot is 49699333.
Alternatively, you can use the octokit/request-action to get the ID.
on: [workflow_dispatch]
jobs:
  hello-world:
    runs-on: ubuntu-latest
    steps:
      - uses: actions/create-github-app-token@v2
        id: app-token
        with:
          app-id: ${{ vars.APP_ID }}
          private-key: ${{ secrets.PRIVATE_KEY }}
          owner: ${{ github.repository_owner }}
      - uses: peter-evans/create-or-update-comment@v3
        with:
          token: ${{ steps.app-token.outputs.token }}
          issue-number: ${{ github.event.issue.number }}
          body: "Hello, World!"on: [issues]
jobs:
  hello-world:
    runs-on: ubuntu-latest
    steps:
      - uses: actions/create-github-app-token@v2
        id: app-token
        with:
          app-id: ${{ vars.APP_ID }}
          private-key: ${{ secrets.PRIVATE_KEY }}
          owner: ${{ github.repository_owner }}
          repositories: |
            repo1
            repo2
      - uses: peter-evans/create-or-update-comment@v3
        with:
          token: ${{ steps.app-token.outputs.token }}
          issue-number: ${{ github.event.issue.number }}
          body: "Hello, World!"on: [issues]
jobs:
  hello-world:
    runs-on: ubuntu-latest
    steps:
      - uses: actions/create-github-app-token@v2
        id: app-token
        with:
          app-id: ${{ vars.APP_ID }}
          private-key: ${{ secrets.PRIVATE_KEY }}
          owner: another-owner
      - uses: peter-evans/create-or-update-comment@v3
        with:
          token: ${{ steps.app-token.outputs.token }}
          issue-number: ${{ github.event.issue.number }}
          body: "Hello, World!"Note
Selected permissions must be granted to the installation of the specified app and repository owner. Setting a permission that the installation does not have will result in an error.
on: [issues]
jobs:
  hello-world:
    runs-on: ubuntu-latest
    steps:
      - uses: actions/create-github-app-token@v2
        id: app-token
        with:
          app-id: ${{ vars.APP_ID }}
          private-key: ${{ secrets.PRIVATE_KEY }}
          owner: ${{ github.repository_owner }}
          permission-issues: write
      - uses: peter-evans/create-or-update-comment@v3
        with:
          token: ${{ steps.app-token.outputs.token }}
          issue-number: ${{ github.event.issue.number }}
          body: "Hello, World!"You can use a matrix strategy to create tokens for multiple user or organization accounts.
Note
See this documentation for information on using multiline strings in workflows.
on: [workflow_dispatch]
jobs:
  set-matrix:
    runs-on: ubuntu-latest
    outputs:
      matrix: ${{ steps.set.outputs.matrix }}
    steps:
      - id: set
        run: echo 'matrix=[{"owner":"owner1"},{"owner":"owner2","repos":["repo1"]}]' >>"$GITHUB_OUTPUT"
  use-matrix:
    name: "@${{ matrix.owners-and-repos.owner }} installation"
    needs: [set-matrix]
    runs-on: ubuntu-latest
    strategy:
      matrix:
        owners-and-repos: ${{ fromJson(needs.set-matrix.outputs.matrix) }}
    steps:
      - uses: actions/create-github-app-token@v2
        id: app-token
        with:
          app-id: ${{ vars.APP_ID }}
          private-key: ${{ secrets.PRIVATE_KEY }}
          owner: ${{ matrix.owners-and-repos.owner }}
          repositories: ${{ join(matrix.owners-and-repos.repos) }}
      - uses: octokit/request-action@v2.x
        id: get-installation-repositories
        with:
          route: GET /installation/repositories
        env:
          GITHUB_TOKEN: ${{ steps.app-token.outputs.token }}
      - run: echo "$MULTILINE_JSON_STRING"
        env:
          MULTILINE_JSON_STRING: ${{ steps.get-installation-repositories.outputs.data }}on: [push]
jobs:
  create_issue:
    runs-on: self-hosted
    steps:
      - name: Create GitHub App token
        id: create_token
        uses: actions/create-github-app-token@v2
        with:
          app-id: ${{ vars.GHES_APP_ID }}
          private-key: ${{ secrets.GHES_APP_PRIVATE_KEY }}
          owner: ${{ vars.GHES_INSTALLATION_ORG }}
          github-api-url: ${{ vars.GITHUB_API_URL }}
      - name: Create issue
        uses: octokit/request-action@v2.x
        with:
          route: POST /repos/${{ github.repository }}/issues
          title: "New issue from workflow"
          body: "This is a new issue created from a GitHub Action workflow."
        env:
          GITHUB_TOKEN: ${{ steps.create_token.outputs.token }}Required: GitHub App ID.
Required: GitHub App private key. Escaped newlines (\\n) will be automatically replaced with actual newlines.
Some other actions may require the private key to be Base64 encoded. To avoid recreating a new secret, it can be decoded on the fly, but it needs to be managed securely. Here is an example of how this can be achieved:
steps:
  - name: Decode the GitHub App Private Key
    id: decode
    run: |
      private_key=$(echo "${{ secrets.PRIVATE_KEY }}" | base64 -d | awk 'BEGIN {ORS="\\n"} {print}' | head -c -2) &> /dev/null
      echo "::add-mask::$private_key"
      echo "private-key=$private_key" >> "$GITHUB_OUTPUT"
  - name: Generate GitHub App Token
    id: app-token
    uses: actions/create-github-app-token@v2
    with:
      app-id: ${{ vars.APP_ID }}
      private-key: ${{ steps.decode.outputs.private-key }}Optional: The owner of the GitHub App installation. If empty, defaults to the current repository owner.
Optional: Comma or newline-separated list of repositories to grant access to.
Note
If owner is set and repositories is empty, access will be scoped to all repositories in the provided repository owner's installation. If owner and repositories are empty, access will be scoped to only the current repository.
Optional: The permissions to grant to the token. By default, the token inherits all of the installation's permissions. We recommend to explicitly list the permissions that are required for a use case. This follows GitHub's own recommendation to control permissions of GITHUB_TOKEN in workflows. The documentation also lists all available permissions, just prefix the permission key with permission- (e.g., pull-requests → permission-pull-requests).
The reason we define one permision-<permission name> input per permission is to benefit from type intelligence and input validation built into GitHub's action runner.
Optional: If true, the token will not be revoked when the current job is complete.
Optional: The URL of the GitHub REST API. Defaults to the URL of the GitHub Rest API where the workflow is run from.
GitHub App installation access token.
GitHub App installation ID.
GitHub App slug.
The action creates an installation access token using the POST /app/installations/{installation_id}/access_tokens endpoint. By default,
- The token is scoped to the current repository or repositoriesif set.
- The token inherits all the installation's permissions.
- The token is set as output tokenwhich can be used in subsequent steps.
- Unless the skip-token-revokeinput is set to true, the token is revoked in thepoststep of the action, which means it cannot be passed to another job.
- The token is masked, it cannot be logged accidentally.
Note
Installation permissions can differ from the app's permissions they belong to. Installation permissions are set when an app is installed on an account. When the app adds more permissions after the installation, an account administrator will have to approve the new permissions before they are set on the installation.