Github Actions + AWS
In this tutorial, you will set up Digger to automate terraform pull requests using Github Actions and AWS
Prerequisites
- A GitHub repository with valid terraform code. Here’s a demo repo
- Your AWS credentials. See Hashicorp’s AWS tutorial
- Digger token from cloud.digger.dev. You can also self-host Digger
Create Action Secrets
In GitHub repository settings, go to Secrets and Variables - Actions. Create the following secrets:
AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID
andAWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY
(you can also use OIDCDIGGER_TOKEN
- your Digger token (cloud or self-hosted)
Create digger.yml
This file contains Digger configuration and needs to be placed at the root level of your repository. Assuming your terraform code is in the prod
directory:
Create Github Actions workflow file
Place it at .github/workflows/digger_workflow.yml
(name is important!)
This file defines a simple workflow that
- Checks out repository using Github’s official Checkout action
- Runs Digger. Note that
DIGGER_TOKEN
needs to be set as a secret in Actions (either repository secret, or environment secret), you also need to set AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID and AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY parameter. OIDC is also supported if you prefer that route
Create a PR to verify that it works
Terraform will run an existing plan against your code.
Make any change to your terraform code e.g. add a blank line. An action run should start (you can see log output in Actions). After some time you should see output of Terraform Plan added as a comment to your PR.
Then you can add a comment like digger apply
and shortly after apply output will be added as comment too.